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In The Age Of Trump, Tech CEOs Cast Themselves As The New Statesmen
https://www.buzzfeed.com/charliewarzel/in-the-age-of-trump-tech-ceos-cast-themselves-as-the-new-sta
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Michael Short/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Mark Zuckerberg isn’t running for president of the United States, but you could 
be forgiven for thinking otherwise.

On Tuesday morning, the Facebook CEO kicked off the company’s annual developers 
conference in San Francisco with a glancing shot at Donald Trump, followed by a 
reiteration of the company’s oft-repeated pledge to bring the world together. 
Zuckerberg spoke for only 30 minutes or so and he spent many of them on what he 
touted as Facebook’s benevolent efforts to bring universal access to 
information — and prosperity — to underdeveloped nations. “We are one global 
community,” he told the crowd, invoking climate change, the Syrian refugee 
crisis, and touching on world events from Sierra Leone to India. All this at a 
developers conference, mind you.

Zuck’s not alone. Last month Apple CEO Tim Cook led his keynote with a similar 
stump-speech vibe. He dove right into the company’s national security and 
privacy fight against the FBI, before addressing plans to reduce Apple’s 
environmental impact and detailing its efforts to advance medical research and 
“lay the foundation to transform care.”

Two weeks ago Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told attendees of the company’s 
annual Build developers conference of plans to “move our society forward,” 
asking “profound questions” of his developers: “Is technology driving economic 
growth for everyone or is economic growth stalled in spite of technological 
span? Is technology empowering people or is it displacing us? Is technology 
helping us preserve our enduring values such as privacy, or is it compromising 
it?”

Google CEO Sundar Pichai hasn’t delivered his big keynote yet (it’s coming up 
May 18), but late last year he issued an open letter in support of Muslims 
after Donald Trump suggested he’d blanket-ban the religious group from entering 
the United States. And just last month he spoke to BuzzFeed News at great 
length about his ambitions for Google, suggesting that “every jump in 
technology involves leveling the playing field.”

Welcome to 2016: where tech’s biggest leaders are no longer selling themselves 
as innovators, creative geniuses, or domineering tycoons, but as world leaders 
— statesmen shaping the course of human history. And it’s most visible during 
the big keynotes that today sound more like TED Talks than the product 
announcements and celebrations of code they began as.

While the shift in tone at tech’s big annual events has evolved somewhat subtly 
over the past decade, it’s still rather jarring to see how far it’s come from 
the obsessive product-and-design focus of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs or the 
aggressive, sweaty, profit-and-revenue-driven speeches of Microsoft’s Steve 
Ballmer era. Remember this:

Video available at: https://youtube.com/watch?v=Vhh_GeBPOhs.
youtube.com

If last year’s F8 keynote was about how Facebook planned to eat the internet, 
this year’s was about how Facebook plans to fix the world. “It takes courage to 
choose hope over fear,” Zuckerberg told attendees, arguing that Facebook is 
playing a long game with the aim of changing the world for the better by 
connecting people. “I hope that we have the courage to see that the path 
forward is to bring people together, not push them apart,” he said.

There are plenty of reasons for the global leadership rhetoric CEOs are 
adopting. As technology seeps deeper into our lives, the stakes become higher. 
In just 30 minutes Zuckerberg quickly sketched an outline of a future in which 
many of the things we do outside of Facebook today (TV, commerce, ordering 
flowers) will be done inside Facebook tomorrow. And so there’s a certain amount 
of reassurance in these seemingly altruistic pronouncements — regardless of the 
very real commercial motivations beneath them.

It’s also increasingly necessary as America’s big tech companies turn their 
focus to international expansion — where nearly all the potential for growth 
over the next decade lies. The U.S’s Big Tech leaders are engaged in an 
image-shaping campaign that’s meant to assuage not only the world’s fears as 
they pertain to the tech industry, but also as they pertain to the country in 
which they’re based. If these guys sound like ambassadors or politicians, it’s 
because they kind of are — and the country they represent is in the middle of a 
chaotic and very public identity crisis.

This is especially true at a time when privacy concerns are writ large and 
regular people are worrying more about the amount of information, money, and 
power these companies have and the impact it may or may not have on their 
lives. Because in the end, Facebook’s internet access–beaming plane is held 
aloft by the advertisements the company sells against our personal information. 
Google, which also sells advertising against the personal information of its 
users, is likewise pushing hard into internet markets all over Asia and Africa. 
Even Apple’s very principled privacy fight with the FBI is a helpful piece of 
marketing. Privacy, after all, is among Apple’s most important products.

This noticeable rhetorical shift may also have something to do with Big Tech’s 
moon shots — read: bold, futuristic projects like Hyperloops, self-driving 
cars, curing cancer, and virtual reality — coming home to roost. Over the last 
seven years, tech’s biggest players like Elon Musk, Larry Page, Sergey Brin, 
and Mark Zuckerberg have allocated considerable resources toward long-term 
projects with the lofty goal of altering the course of human experience. These 
moon shots often serve as an ambitious yin (Google’s self-driving car) to a 
more mundane and revenue-producing yang (Google’s AdSense).

                                                                
Tim Cook discussing Apple’s environmental footprint at its last keynote in 
March. Stephen Lam / Reuters

But years after their initial announcement, many of these projects are finally 
real. Facebook’s Oculus Rift VR headset has shipped, self-driving cars have 
logged many millions of miles, and while Musk’s Hyperloop is still a vision, 
his newest Tesla looks poised to change how we think of electric cars; 
meanwhile, his other company, SpaceX, just successfully landed a rocket on a 
boat… after it pushed a satellite into space. And so, as the innovations that 
were sold as world-altering become reality, there’s pressure on the executives 
who sold them to step up and play the part.

And it’s this idea — that Big Tech’s technology has caught up with its greatest 
ambitions — that makes the keynotes at these annual events so eminently 
watchable and, in a way, as consequential as anything happening at any 
political rally today here at home. After all, Facebook with its 1.6 billion 
users is bigger than any country on Earth. This doesn’t mean we won’t roll our 
eyes when Zuckerberg’s tells us it’s time to choose “hope over fear”; we will. 
We roll our eyes when world leaders promise to “make America great again,” too.

Charlie Warzel is a senior writer for BuzzFeed News and is based in New York. 
Warzel reports on and writes about the intersection of tech and culture.
Contact Charlie Warzel at [email protected].
                 

    

    

    

                



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