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Corporate Greed Isn’t New. The Internet Is Just the New Playing Field, says Douglas Rushkoff


8m read
·Nov 4, 2024

The digital economy is breaking things because most people running digital companies aren't aware of the operating system that's beneath what they're doing. There's a good old fashion venture capital driven operating system. It goes back to central currency and corporatism and chartered monopolies and really the way our economy works, which has worked for a good 400 or 500 years and promoted everything from the British East India Trading Company right through to Walmart and General Electric.

But when you take that and juice it up with digital steroids, weird things start to happen. You end up able to tweak and optimize your business so carefully that you can really see, is it growing? Is it not growing? What can we do to promote growth? Growth. Growth. And if your company is not growing, you end up in big trouble against all the other players that are growing. It's simple power law dynamics. It's a winner takes all landscape.

So if you have a company like Twitter, which I would see in my old fashion view as a successful company, it makes $500 million a quarter based on a 140-character app. Success, right? No. In the current environment that's a failure because they don't have a growth strategy. They don't know how to turn into a video company, a news company, a social company, an everything company.

And the reason why the digital economy is breaking our businesses is because we're taking the old agenda of growth and running it on digital platforms, and it ends up amplifying and spinning this priority out of control. Most of us look at the industrial age as this natural outgrowth of the need to do more and better business. But as I researched it, I found out that most of the innovations we came up with in the industrial age were really for the opposite.

There was a thriving peer-to-peer economy right at the end of the Middle Ages that nobody likes to talk about. The soldiers had come back from the Crusades. They had all sorts of new inventions and technologies and mechanisms; there were new trade routes that they had opened up. And they had come back to their towns and they took something that they found in the Middle East called the bazaar, and they revived it as something they called the marketplace.

So now people who had just been peasants working on the land of the Lords started coming together and trading this stuff that they made. And they had all of these really interesting instruments from market money and local currency and grain-based currency and all of these evolved really to promote the exchange of value and the velocity of transactions between people. And it started to really do well, which was the problem.

As the peasants became wealthy, the aristocracy got scared, who are these people? They're not going to be dependent on us anymore. So they came up with two main financial innovations to prevent the rise of this peer-to-peer economy. The first one was the chartered monopoly, really the parent to the modern corporation. All the chartered monopoly was was a way to say all of you small businesses are now illegal.

If you want to be in the shoe business, you have to work for his majesty's royal shoe company. You want to be in the grain business, you have to work for his majesty's royal grain company. So people who were small business people now became employees. Instead of selling the value they created, now they sold their time as servants, as wage laborers.

The second invention they came up with was central currency. Not such a terrible thing in itself. It's great to have a long-distance currency that lots of people can use and value, but the problem was they made all of the local currencies illegal. So the only way people could trade with each other, the candlestick maker could trade with the chicken farmer, was by borrowing central currency from the treasury.

So now you had to borrow money at interest just in order to transact. And that set in motion really a growth cascade. If you have a currency that has to be paid back with interest, in order to just make ends meet, you need an economy that's growing. You need more money next year than there was this year.

So that worked well for colonial powers, as long as we could extend into Africa and South America and North America, find slaves, find new resources, we could grow. But what happens when you reach the end of the planet's growth as we did really at the end of World War II? Then we started to look for really virtual surface area, some new way to grow.

And that was the technology. We believed that digital technology and the World Wide Web and computers would really create a new place, a new virtual territory for us to colonize. And it just turns out what we've been colonizing for the last 20 years is human attention and human time. And now it looks like we're even running out of that.

Well, when the Internet first emerged, people like me thought hooray, now we're going to have a way to restore all that peer-to-peer conductivity between people. And some of the earliest Internet businesses actually sought to do that in one way or another. If you look at the path of eBay and PayPal and Etsy and Square, there are a lot of businesses that are looking at how they can connect people in a lateral way.

The problem is, as those businesses grew and everybody got interested in the net, other folks, the folks who really started Wired Magazine or the Global Business Network, a lot of folks who were from the old NASDAQ stock exchange, which had been really depleted ever since the biotech crash of 1987, they sought in the Internet a new avenue for growth.

So for them, it wasn't about how are we going to connect people in new wonderful ways and let them create and exchange value between them, it was really more how can we use digital platforms to extract value from people and places? So if you compare an eBay, which is promoting exchange, to an Amazon, which is promoting extraction, you can kind of begin to see the difference.

What happens is you end up with digital businesses that really are started more in the flip this house model of business than the I'm going to start a business that helps people and keeps going for 20 years. People put money into an Internet business in order to get to acquisition or IPO. They want to grow this business a hundred times and then get out. It's called an exit strategy.

Then it doesn't matter what happens. So, if you have a ride-sharing company, are you going to pay your drivers enough so that they can have an ecosystem that lasts 20 years? No, you don't care about that. You can adopt a scorched earth policy toward this because you only need those drivers and that whole ride-sharing sector long enough to establish a monopoly and then move over into something else.

When the Internet came around, we all thought we're all going to work at home in our underwear, in our own time exchanging value with one another, but instead we've ended up with an Internet that takes more time from us, an Internet that we feel exhausted and drained when we're done using it. And that's because we're not using it; it's using us.

The Internet is really just the technological front on a whole series of business plans that are looking to extract money from us, time from us, attention from us, and if we have none of those things, at least data from us. And we're not feeling it creating value for us; we're not feeling it really enhance our ability to create and exchange value with other people.

It's harder for most of us to make a living now rather than easier. And that's not because automation is doing things better; it's because we're really facing very extractive business plans, extensions of that very same late medieval squashing of peer-to-peer activity, although now amplified in every device in our arsenal.

The reason I'm optimistic is because the metrics are all on the side of doing business well rather than this scorched earth short-term extractive model that most digital companies use. If you look at the data, family businesses do better than shareholder-owned businesses on every single metric except one: they grow slower during bubbles.

And actually you kind of want to grow slower during bubbles, because if you grow big during a bubble, then you're part of what pops. Now, the reason why family businesses do better in the long run than shareholder-owned businesses is because the person running a family business wants it to be around in another generation or two or three.

The person running a shareholder-owned business wants to extract enough money from that business so their grandchild can be given this wad of cash. The person with a family business wants the business to be healthy enough so the grandchild can then run a successful thriving business.

And because your family name is on the business, you don't want to do really mean things to your employees or to the places where you operate, because then people are going to hate your family. It's your name. It's your face. So a very different dynamic gets set up and one that's ultimately more sustainable as a business.

And startup founders of startups and technology businesses have to come to understand that taking venture capital and going for the big acquisition, going for that one out of 10,000 chance of getting a homerun is dumb compared to taking a very small amount of money and hitting the single or the double. In other words, making ten or $20 million is not tragic; it's still enough.

You can still really – you're going to get by on that. You're going to be able to send your kids to great colleges. It's not a failure to have millions of dollars. But if you have to aim for the billions, if you are forced to, your probability is so low - when I look at these founders running to Sequoia and Flatiron and Y Combinator because they want to go big and get the homerun, it looks to me like those people you see taking their welfare checks and going to the bodega and buying lottery tickets because they want to get the jackpot, the $43 million; they have no chance of doing that.

And they would have a chance of taking their $5 or $10 and actually investing it, buying a book, learning how to do something, getting a job. They have a much higher probability of succeeding. And it just breaks my heart when I see a kid have a great app, a great idea, and then they turn to a venture capitalist who gives them a ton of money and a high valuation and then has them pivot.

The pivot is not to do something better; all a pivot means is you're going to abandon what your original business was in order to come up with something that's sellable to the next round of investors, the next round of suckers, really. And do you really want to throw away your business? Do you really want to dispose of your idea in order to turn it into the brand name on a Ponzi scheme?

I hope not, because there are still so many great things we can do with these technologies. There's so much money to be made. There's so much revenue in creating connections between people, in helping people create and exchange value. The mantra I would give any startup and any big business is to make other people rich. If you make your users rich, they will come back. If you make them poor, you've killed your marketplace.

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