Jonathan Taplin -- Move fast and break things ================================================ This book is a rant, perhaps even a screed, but it's a well focused one that we need to hear. It's also very clear and informative. Taplin's major themes: (1) Much of the Internet is controlled by monopolies, in particular by Amazon, Facebook, and Google, but also monopolies and restricted competition among Internet service providers. (2) The Silicon Valley tech oligarchy is rapacious: they take what they want and need without asking (our) permission and without worrying particularly about breaking social norms; they (especially Amazon) bully content producers. Amazon, in particular, uses its leverage to drive down the compensation that it pays to content producers. (3) The tech oligarchy is aided by a libertarian agenda of rich political campaign donors and by a libertarian leaning political class. (4) Content producers (musicians, book authors, video producers, etc.) are left with no no way to make a reasonable profit on their work. Libertarian philosophy is no longer fringe and extreme. It is mainstream to Silicon Valley tech executives and the Republican party. When enough powerful people think and act that way (in accordance with libertarianism), it inevitably leads the economy to a loss of jobs, to low wages, and to a "Gig" employment landscape (i.e. work for small payments without benefits, without job security, and workers without leverage when they deal with their employers). Monopolies lead to oligarchies. Oligarchies lead to an imbalance of power, in particular with the wealthy having much more influence on our governments at various levels. And, that power imbalance leads to economic inequality. We are seeing lots of that in the U.S., now. One specific way in which oligarchs use their power is to fight back against government regulation and monitoring. And, that means that they and the corporations that they run become even more powerful, forming a positive feedback loop. Another effect of this power imbalance is that large corporations and the people who run them can very effectively push-back against the enactment of regulations intended to slow or prevent climate change. If we want to have any hope at all of taking action to slow down the influence of humans on climate change, we will need to control the power of large corporations and monopolies to impede that. Taplin gives some account of several Silicon Valley leaders (Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Peter Thiel of Facebook, etc.) and how their respective corporations gained the monopolistic powers and position that they currently have. The problems that Taplin identifies are: (1) Internet monopolies, in particular, Google, Amazon, and Facebook; (2) the libertarian, cowboy capitalist, anti-regulation, and anti-tax agenda that has taken root in the U.S. Federal government; (3) the extreme wealth of a small group of people in the U.S.; and (4) the feedback loop between that wealth and government (the wealth influences and controls government; government enables the creation of even more extreme wealth). There are several basic principles about the function and structure of the Internet that enable the creation of huge, concentrated wealth. Some of those principles are: (1) the ability to use and offer proprietary technology that gives its owners an advantage over their competitors; (2) the use of network effects; (3) the ability to use economies of scale (when everything is bits and bytes, you can multiply content, connections, etc. very fast); (4) branding and first to market which give a huge advantage and benefit (in particular, they enable the creation of virtual, if not real, monopolies). Taplin seems to be arguing that we are being abused by these large and powerful corporations. However, part of the problem is that many of us feel that we are benefiting from the services of Google, Amazon, and Facebook. Could it be that if their power were limited and restricted, we would receive even better service? Or, is it that Taplin is arguing that there are collateral costs from those monopoly powers? He certainly does spend a good deal of time describing the rough treatment of music content producers. One question: Is this a problem that can be solved by individuals? Or, is it something that can only be solved by larger institutions, in particular by the U.S. Federal government? If that is the case, it's hard to imagine that there will be much done about these monopolies, given the pro-business mindset in Washington, D.C. Since the presidency of Ronald Reagan, the U.S. Federal government has done little to stop the growth of large monopolistic corporations. And, that's true of both Republican and Democratic administrations. See the following article by Barry Lynn from "The Atlantic" for a good bit of backup and support on Taplin's claims that anti-trust and anti-monopoly actions by the U.S. Federal government have been weak and that the consequences have been harmful: https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/02/antimonopoly-big-business/514358/. Another good reference is "Cornered: The New Monopoly Capitalism and the Economics of Destruction", also by Barry Lynn. We should not expect this to get better. Rather it is likely to get worse, and to worsen much faster, for several reasons: (1) As, Taplin mentions, some companies, in particular those that leverage the Internet and digital technologies, are able to grow and scale in some extreme ways. (2) Companies like Google and Amazon and Facebook, too, I suspect, are investing heavily in data science and machine learning technologies. Soon, if not already, those technologies will be multiplicative, that is, the already huge companies that are able to invest in them will be able to grow and out-run their competition even faster because of those technologies, and to do so while employing even fewer people than they do now. Even ignoring loose talk about "the singularity", some of the companies with machine learning tools and weapons in their arsenal are likely to have unimaginable advantages. One thing to keep in mind is that some of us are hurt much more than others by the out-sized power of some of these monopolistic corporation. For example, those of us who are retired are hurt less by the destruction of jobs and the downward pressure on wages. In addition to lower wages and fewer jobs, the concentrated power and the power imbalance brought by monopolies and an oligarchy are likely to push us more and more in the direction of a "Gig" economy and an employment landscape where more and more of the available work is short-term, piece-work, contracting work, most of which will be without medical benefits and without any stability or security. By the way, this "Gig" economy and "Uber-ization" and micro-payments for small tasks seems drastic enough when we think in terms of replacing taxi drivers and other tasks that must be done locally. But there are many sectors and types of work that can be done remotely. So, what happens when people all over the work (many of whom live at much lower standards of living that those of us in the developed world) start competing for the same work? I'm a computer programmer. It's disturbing for me to try to imagine what it might be like if people from anywhere in the world could compete for the kind of work I do. We're being talked into this free-market capitalism with the reasoning that it brings more economic growth. But, there are several things wrong with that argument: (1) The benefits are not broadly distributed, and so those who need help the most receive the least benefit. (2) Workers end up with even less power, and so the power imbalance continues to get larger. Even as I'm writing this (February, 2018), the U.S. Supreme Court is considering whether workers can be required to pay dues to a union in their workplace. A negative decision on that is likely to result in even fewer unionized workers and an further shift in power away from workers and toward employers. I suspect that the political pressure in that direction with increase. "Move fast and break things" is a sobering book, and is worth reading. 03/10/2018 .. vim:ft=rst:fo+=a: