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Nobel Prize Winner Argues Tech Companies Should Be Changing The World (qz.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Tech companies are competing to serve the wealthy, argues the winner of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize, complaining there's no "global vision," with big innovations instead "designed and dedicated mostly for commercial successes... while trillions of dollars are invested in developing robotics and artificial intelligence for military and commercial purposes, there is little interest in applying technology to overcome the massive human problems of the world." A genius in the tech industry "can dedicate his work to creating a medical breakthrough that will save thousands of lives -- or he can develop an app that will let people amuse themselves."

As an exception, he cites the low-cost Endless computer, which runs Linux and has 50,000 Wikipedia articles pre-installed to enable offline research -- plus more than 100 applications -- for a price of just $79. "One part of Endless's business is operated like a conventional, profit-seeking company, while the other part is a social business that provides underserved populations with educational, health, and creative services they were once denied. Endless is already being shipped around the globe by four of the five largest computer manufacturers. It has become the leading PC platform in Indonesia and much of Southeast Asia. It has also been selected as the standard operating system for the Brazilian Ministry of Education, and in coming months it will be adopted as the primary platform by a number of other Latin American countries."

The article is by Muhammad Yunus, who pioneered the concepts of microcredit and microfinance, and is taken from his new book, A World of Three Zeros: The New Economics of Zero Poverty, Zero Unemployment, and Zero Net Carbon Emissions.

12 of 154 comments (clear)

  1. A lot of money does not make you a good person by gweihir · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In fact, it is a pretty good indicator for the opposite. In capitalism, people tend to forget that and that harms humanity as a whole.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    1. Re:A lot of money does not make you a good person by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Pablo Escobar "[had] ...an estimated net worth of US $30 billion by the early 1990s (equivalent to about $55 billion as of 2016), making him one of the richest men in the world in his prime."

    2. Re:A lot of money does not make you a good person by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nah very rarely does it make you free. Look at Mark Z with his estimated $70bn+ net value. It's not like he opens up his netbank and sees the $70bn bank balance is it? In fact he jumped from $10bn to $70bn without really doing much. He could of gone on a long holiday and it would of made little difference.

      So, the definition of rich is what? The value of the stock you have? the line of credit the bank gives you? Rich gives you plenty of options, weather or not rich people choose the right options is few and far between. Otherwise, things like world hunger wouldn't exist. Usually any options they do pick will be ones that serve their interests first. I.E donating to charity is a great way to save on Tax. Especially if you "own" said charity.

      As for useful. I've met people who have are worth into the $100's of millions in personal wealth. I can tell you they are far from this word "useful" if anything they expect everyone to kiss their ass and prove their usefulness to the them. Not the other way around.

    3. Re:A lot of money does not make you a good person by Pseudonym · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't know what the research is on this, but my default assumption is that money, like religion, tends to amplify the sort of person you are.

      If you're a good person, money makes you very good. If you're a bad person, money makes you very bad. If you're an ignorant person, money makes you very ignorant. And so on.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  2. Bleeding the world dry IS a global vision. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Like all giant corporations, Facebook/Google/Apple/Microsoft/etc. exist first and foremost to monetize the great unwashed masses. Part of the manipulation required to do that most effectively was convincing them that there was any other goal than that.

    Social engineering comes later - after everyone involved already has more money than god - but there was never any reason to believe Zuckerberg et. al.'s aspirations along those lines were of the "solving world hunger" variety instead of the "privatized Ministry of Truth" variety.

  3. Tech geniuses to solve humanity problems? by ark1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Blame those pouring trillions into military & commercial instead of real human problems and not tech geniuses.

  4. Oh, there is interest, compounded annually by burtosis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    there is little interest in applying technology to overcome the massive human problems of the world.

    Completely false, even says so in the summary. Throughout history, if the general population was upset with the ruling class they overthrew them. With automated factories and armies, total control will soon be put in the hands of a few people, unlike all of history. Heck, with all the automation there won't be a need for the plebes to create the luxurious life they are accustomed to. I'm pretty sure Oligarchs agree, this will overcome a massive human problem.

  5. Re:Article make logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    The fallacy is this:

    there is little interest in applying technology to overcome the massive human problems of the world.

    How exactly would technology overcome the problem of a world where 75% of the population is savage, low-intelligence monkeys who aren't capable of complex thought?

  6. Easier said than done by boudie2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Technology is too busy causing problems to be solving problems.

  7. Re:No they shouldn't by blindseer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's what a lot of people do not understand. A company cannot provide food, shelter, medicine, or whatever unless they make a profit. If there is no profit in it then they cannot pay their wages, pay back investors, and have money left over for when times are thin or to invest in expansion.

    Profit is good. Greed is a natural instinct. People understand greed. It is with greed that businesses stay in business to feed another natural instinct, charity. When people have enough to see to their own needs they tend to see to the needs of others. Those that don't see charity as a virtue can be tolerated, and may in fact be necessary for human survival. People with unrestrained charity are also seen as not right in the head. Giving their food up to the point they starve themselves is not healthy, for themselves or society.

    I keep seeing people claim we should increase taxed the wealthy because "they can afford it". What is that other than greed? These people see others with more so they send the government to take it from them. That's just theft by proxy.

    I remember a history teacher in high school making fun of "trickle down economics". He said that the taxes on the wealthy was reduced on the theory that the wealthy would use that tax money to invest in more business but they instead bought expensive cars, went on vacations, and generally lived it up. I bought it, trickle down economics was bad. Then, years later, something made me think of this some more. These wealthy people put a lot of people to work building those cars they bought, making their lavish parties, carrying their clubs at golf courses, and so on. They still invested in the economy. Even if they stuffed all that money under a mattress it still helped the economy since that was a store of wealth that could be added back when they couldn't afford those big parties and golf trips. They'd still have to buy food. Even if it stayed there until they died that money ended up in the hands of their children where they'd spend it on food, housing, clothes, and of course luxuries like caviar, lobster, plane tickets, and tips to the golf caddies.

    We cannot grow total wealth without getting wealth disparity. Taking money from the wealthy and giving it to the poor rewards poverty. That's not the signal we should be sending as a society. Punishing the wealthy only because they are wealthy is paving made of good intentions that leads us down a road to where we don't want to go.

    --
    I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  8. Re:Not only technologists... by lucm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Even nobel prize winners are trying to make a quick buck from publishing their books, instead of spreading their ideas to a bigger audience free of charge. Definition of irony?

    Obama won a Nobel prize for peace, then went on to spend the most money on the military in the history of the USA, on top of vastly expanding NSA spying programs and establishing a formal kill list.

    Think I'm kidding?

    Mr. Obama has placed himself at the helm of a top secret “nominations” process to designate terrorists for kill or capture, of which the capture part has become largely theoretical. He had vowed to align the fight against Al Qaeda with American values; the chart, introducing people whose deaths he might soon be asked to order, underscored just what a moral and legal conundrum this could be.

    Mr. Obama is the liberal law professor who campaigned against the Iraq war and torture, and then insisted on approving every new name on an expanding “kill list,” poring over terrorist suspects’ biographies on what one official calls the macabre “baseball cards” of an unconventional war. When a rare opportunity for a drone strike at a top terrorist arises — but his family is with him — it is the president who has reserved to himself the final moral calculation.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05...
    ^ yes, NY times, not breitbart or fox news

    It's more hypocrisy than irony, though.

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    lucm, indeed.
  9. Re:No they shouldn't by coofercat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yep, fsck 'em, I say. I've made a bit of money, and I'm 'pulling up the draw bridge' to make sure my neighbours, and definitely that grubby looking guy I see on the way to the shops don't get any of it. I mean, I know I'll never get any further up the ladder, because of the millionaires and billionaires all keeping all their money to themselves, but hey, at least that grubby guy down the street won't get any of mine.

    "Punishing" the wealthy to give up a little more than they currently do doesn't really punish them. Most of the super-rich (people with multiple billions in personal wealth) wouldn't notice if you took a million dollars off them each year. It wouldn't affect their buying power, it wouldn't affect the output of their investments, and they won't materially suffer for it. In other words, what looks like a large amount of money here, makes almost no difference at all.

    Shockingly, there are people who just happen to live somewhere very poor. They were born because their parents are so poor that if they don't have some kids to help out with the work around the house, they won't earn the few cents they need to buy a decent meal, or to fix the hole in the roof. They have to have quite a few kids because there's a good chance a couple of them will die during childhood due to disease and malnutrition, so it's not like they can just produce kids 'to order' either. Such people can't work themselves out of poverty in anything like a reasonable timeframe because they have near-zero income. That means they don't have any spare money to buy an extra bag of seeds to grow more crops, or to keep the goat alive for another year. If someone gives them an extra bag of seeds today, they go from a daily income of $1 to $1.01. That extra one cent can be used to increase their output next time around, and so on. In other words, a tiny amount of money here helps to dramatically accelerate the rate of 'wealth creation' in a vast number of people.

    As for stuffing money in the mattress - that's effectively what the super-rich are doing. Their personal spending is massively outstripped by their income, and so more and more money is being removed from the economy and into their hands. They're not spending it all, and so the flows of money around the economy are reduced. Do too much of that, and you get a recession - which absolutely won't affect the super-rich as they move off-shore, making the problem even worse.