My technology thesis is this:
All technology should punch up, not down.
It should connect the disconnected. It should empower the disempowered. It should inform the uninformed.
It should empower communities that historically have been underrepresented and underserved.
It should help people with similar needs and values to organize together in order to improve their quality of life.
It should help spread wealth and power more equitably. It should allow people to make things they could not previously make. It should let people find audiences they could not previously reach.
It should help us make a positive impact on each other, and on the planet.
It should not replace the social frameworks and safety nets that are required to ensure everybody has the ability to have a good life. It should not be a tool for wealth hoarding or rent seeking. It should not privatize the parts of peoples’ lives that were previously their own.
It should not fortify the power of people who already have it. It should not maintain the status quo.
It should not make the world less democratic. It should not make the world more dangerous. It should further mutual learning and empathy, not hate and parochialism.
It should amplify and accelerate the power of communities and of individuals, of collaboration, and of mutual aid.
It should never simply be a vehicle for power. It should never simply be a vehicle for wealth. It should always be for people.
Because that’s all we are. That’s all we can build. Networks of people, all inexorably connected.
We can all rise together, or we can all sink together. Those are our choices.
Also see: more concrete thoughts on how to build technology.
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