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Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg

With Silicon Valley 'visionaries', profits are prioritised over true technological progress

Professor Peter Bloom says true innovation rarely ties in with the thirst for profit.

TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION IN the last couple of decades has brought fame and huge wealth to the likes of Elon Musk, Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos. Often feted as geniuses, they are the faces behind the gadgets and media that so many of us depend upon.

Sometimes they are controversial. Sometimes the level of their influence is criticised.

But they also benefit from a common mythology which elevates their status. That myth is the belief that executive “visionaries” leading vast corporations are the engines which power essential breakthroughs too ambitious or futuristic for sluggish public institutions.

There are many who consider the private sector to be far better equipped than the public sector to solve major challenges. We see such ideology embodied in ventures like OpenAI. This successful company was founded on the premise that while artificial intelligence is too consequential to be left to corporations alone, the public sector is simply incapable of keeping up.

The approach is linked to a political philosophy which champions the idea of pioneering entrepreneurs as figureheads who advance civilisation through sheer individual brilliance and determination.

Public funding

In reality, however, most modern technological building blocks – like car batteries, space rockets, the internet, smartphones, and GPS – emerged from publicly funded research. They were not the inspired work of corporate masters of the universe.

And my work suggests a further disconnect: the profit motive seen across Silicon Valley (and beyond) frequently impedes innovation rather than improving it.

For example, attempts to profit from the Covid vaccine had a detrimental impact on global access to medicine. Or consider how recent ventures into space tourism seem to prioritise experiences for extremely wealthy people over less lucrative but more scientifically valuable missions.

More broadly, the thirst for profit means intellectual property restrictions tend to restrict collaboration between (and even within) companies. There is also evidence that short-term shareholder demands distort real innovation in favour of financial reward.

Allowing executives focused on profits to set technological agendas can incur public costs too. It’s expensive dealing with the hazardous low-earth orbit debris caused by space tourism, or the complex regulatory negotiations involved in protecting human rights around AI.

Screen Shot 2023-12-29 at 17.00.05 Shutterstock Shutterstock

So there is a clear tension between the demands of profit and long-term technological progress. This partly explains why major historical innovations emerged from public sector institutions which are relatively insulated from short-term financial pressures.

Market forces alone rarely achieve transformative breakthroughs like space programs or the creation of the internet.

Excessive corporate dominance has other dimming effects. Research scientists seem to dedicate valuable time towards chasing funding influenced by business interests. They are also increasingly incentivised to go into the profitable private sector.

Here those scientists’ and engineers’ talents may be directed at helping advertisers to better keep hold of our attention. Or they may be tasked with finding ways for corporations to make more money from our personal data.

Projects which might address climate change, public health or global inequality are less likely to be the focus. Likewise, research suggests that university laboratories are moving towards a “science for profit” model through industry partnerships.

Digital destiny

But true scientific innovation needs institutions and people guided by principles that go beyond financial incentives. And fortunately, there are places which support them.

Open knowledge institutions” and platform cooperatives are focused on innovation for the collective good rather than individual glory. Governments could do much more to support and invest in these kinds of organisations.

If they do, the coming decades could see the development of healthier innovation ecosystems which go beyond corporations and their executive rule. They would create an environment of cooperation rather than competition, for genuine social benefit.

There will still be a place for the quirky “genius” of Musk and Zuckerberg and their fellow Silicon Valley billionaires. But relying on their bloated corporations to design and dominate technological innovation is a mistake.

Real discovery and progress cannot rely on the minds and motives of a few famous men. It involves investing in institutions which are rooted in democracy and sustainability – not just because it is more ethical, but because in the long term, it will be much more effective.

Peter Bloom is Professor of Management at University of EssexThis article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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    Mute Damo™
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    Feb 27th 2015, 10:40 PM

    With the hippin and a hoppin and a bippin and a boppin

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    Mute Jason Bourne
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    Feb 27th 2015, 11:36 PM

    And she wud put in in ‘da bowel’ and she be mixin and da cookin and da zubidedoobopp!!

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    Mute Aidan Rafter
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    Feb 28th 2015, 3:00 AM

    Don’t know what the Jazz, is all about!

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    Mute Liam Ó Séaghdha
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    Feb 27th 2015, 9:59 PM

    Saville, Glitter, Crosy, who’s next? The royal family?

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    Mute Tony Canning
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    Feb 27th 2015, 10:21 PM

    Um – pay attention…

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    Mute Alan Moore
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    Feb 27th 2015, 10:34 PM

    Saville and Glitter are not the same as Cosby. Cosby’s accusers are adults, looking for money, and mostly messed up. Cosby just pissed someone off that was powerful.

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    Mute Denise Friary
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    Feb 27th 2015, 10:39 PM

    Your disgusting to say that.

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    Mute Patrick Devereau
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    Feb 27th 2015, 11:15 PM

    Your, you are, you’re.. Their, they’re, there goes…

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    Mute David Heenan
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    Feb 27th 2015, 11:17 PM

    Cliff Richard

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    Mute Seán O'Ceallaghan
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    Feb 27th 2015, 11:44 PM

    I wish if anything it was a criminal trial where claiming money wasn’t a factor.

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    Mute Sean Spillane
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    Feb 27th 2015, 10:36 PM

    Methinks he protests too much.

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    Mute tmwtbc
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    Feb 28th 2015, 1:27 AM

    What do you expect him to do? What would you do?

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    Mute Gordon Gekko
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    Feb 28th 2015, 1:32 AM

    Gold diggers

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    Mute johngahan
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    Feb 28th 2015, 2:45 AM

    As Gerry Adams will tell you: if you ain’t got proof, go f**k yourself, even the most logical of circumstantial evidence in copious amounts is irrelevant – you are pure white innocent as the driven snow until anyone can prove otherwise in a court of law.

    Go Bill! Go O.J!

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    Mute Brian Gormley
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    Feb 28th 2015, 10:25 AM

    johngahan, I didn’t realize bill cosby and oj simpson were White as Snow

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    Mute trickytrixster
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    Feb 27th 2015, 11:03 PM

    Bippity bop bzzzzzzz

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    Mute Stephen O'Sullivan
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    Feb 28th 2015, 9:17 AM

    The reason they have gone the defamation route is not only because of money, but partly because the statute has passed for criminal charges in many if the states.

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    Mute Davy Boy
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    Feb 27th 2015, 10:04 PM

    They already their

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    Mute Anne O'Hara
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    Feb 27th 2015, 10:14 PM

    Oh sweet jeebus! Ever heard of syntax?!?

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    Mute Con Manne
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    Feb 28th 2015, 4:22 PM

    Is that like a government charge for using prostitutes?

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