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Ziggy's avatar

"Techno"-optimism? I barely saw a word in Andreesen's essay related to technology. It was all about "tech"--the business of creating monopolistic choke-points. It isn't hard to be a technology optimist and a tech pessimist.

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James Wimberley's avatar

“Scientific progress provides us, collectively, with a range of technological options. The choice between them should be made wisely and democratically, not by the whims of venture capitalists. “. Careful here. There is a lot of space between the proposition “democratic governments should regulate new technologies in the public interest” and “governments should choose which new technologies are deployed”. The argument for gatekeeping regulation is not that governments are better at picking winners, but that nobody else can protect the public interest at all. You can polemically pick examples of governments getting it right on technology (radar, the GSM phone standard), governments getting it wrong (concentrating solar power, fusion) and of successes down to pure luck (the WWW). All parties in this debate need to practice cognitive humility.

One very improbable model is the British Parliament of 1714, which set up the Longitude Prize of up to £20,000. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longitude_rewards This was not a triumph of democracy – Britain was ruled by a bunch of corrupt and grasping landed oligarchs. They did take the trouble to understand a difficult problem, recognize its importance, and take advice from the best scientists around, Newton and Halley. The oligarchs got several important things right: a very serious financial incentive (£20,000 was a duke’s income), partial awards for partial progress, neutrality as to methods (they did not pick a winner as between astronomy vs. chronometry), and a long-term commitment (an Act of Parliament not a reversible royal decree.) The watchmaker John Harrison cracked the problem in 1759, after decades of effort. He then needed more years of effort to claim the prize. Another nice touch is that the prize was open to foreigners. The Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler got a modest award for a contribution to the astronomical method.

So let a hundred flowers bloom - in a well-weeded walled garden protected from Peter Rabbit and other predators.

(Cross-commented from jq.com.)

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