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<center> <h1> Information Technology and Democracy: a Widening Gulf </h1> </center>
<center>
<i>
“(T)he West's technology champion, the United States, has decided to self-flagellate -- both political parties and their elected representatives are busily savaging the US technology industry every way they possibly can.” </i>
<br>
<center> Marc Andreessen, Interview with Noah Smith, 2021 </center>
<br>
<center>
<i>
"Technology could be a force for democracy, but it has turned out to pose just as much threat to it." </i>
Shoshana Zuboff, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, 2018
</center>
</center>
Anxiety over technology and geopolitics is pervasive today. Yet there is a more fundamental conflict underway than that between great powers over technical supremacy. More deeply, the path technology and democracy as systems have taken have put them at loggerheads and the ensuing battle has claimed victims on both sides.
The dominant trends in technology in recent decades have been artificial intelligence and blockchains. These have, respectively, empowered centralized top-down control and turbo-charged atomized polarization and financial capitalism. Both outcomes are corrosive to the values of democratic pluralism. It is little surprise, then, that technology is widely seen as one of the greatest threats to democracy and as a powerful tool for both external authoritarians and those who would subvert democracies from within.
At the same time, democracy was once a radical experiment to scale the governance of a city-state to many millions of citizens spread across continents. Today it has become a synonym in much of the world for the increasingly desperate effort to preserve rigid, outmoded, polarized, paralyzed, and increasingly illegitimate governments. We should not be shocked, therefore, at the disdain of so many technologists have for democratic participation as an impediment to progress, and by the fear that so many of advocates of democracy that technical advance will bring the dominance of authoritarian adversaries or internal collapse.
In this book we hope to show that this tragic conflict is avoidable, that properly conceived technology and democracy can be powerful and natural allies. However, it is no accident that arguments in this direction evoke eye-rolling in many quarters. A gulf of grievance and distrust between the two sides of this divide has developed over the last decade and will not easily be laid to rest. Only by fully acknowledging and embracing the legitimate concerns and critiques of both sides of this conflict shall we have a chance of seeing its root cause and seeking to transcend it. Thus, we begin by drawing out these grievances with a generous spirit, accepting critiques that have raised broad concerns even when they are imperfectly supported by the available evidence. Trying to reconcile these extreme divergences offers an opportunity to raise the ambition of democratic technology.
### Technology’s Attack on Democracy
The last decade of information technology threatens democracy in two related and yet at the same time opposite ways. As Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson famously argued, free democratic societies exist in a “narrow corridor” between social collapse and authoritarianism[^1]. From both sides, information technologies seem to be narrowing the corridor, squeezing the possibility of a free society.
On the one hand, technologies (e.g., social media, cryptography and some other financial technology) are breaking down the social fabric, heightening polarization, eroding norms, undermining law enforcement and accelerating the speed and expanding the reach of financial markets to the point where they are unaccountable to democratic polities. We shall call these threats “anti-social”. On the other hand, technologies (e.g., machine learning, foundation models, the internet of things) are increasing the capacity for centralized surveillance, the ability of small groups of engineers to set patterns in systems that shape the rules of social life for billions of citizens and customers and reduce the scope for people to meaningfully participate in shaping their lives and communities. We will call these threats “centralizing”. Both threats strike at the heart of democracy, which, as Alexei de Tocqueville famously highlighted in Democracy in America, depends on deep and diverse, non-market, decentralized social and civil connections to thrive[^2].
The antisocial threat from recent technologies has social, economic, legal, political and existential faces.
- Socially, there is growing evidence that while social media have offered powerful new platforms for those who have previously been socially isolated (e.g., sexual minorities in conservative locales) to forge connections, on average these tools have contributed to exacerbating social isolation and feelings of exclusion[^3].
- Economically, the geographic, temporal and multiemployer flexibility facilitated by the internet and increasingly by telecommuting have expanded opportunity for many workers in developing countries or who fit poorly in traditional labor markets. Yet they have largely been unmatched by the emergence of appropriate labor market institutions (such as unions and labor regulations) that allow workers to share in the potential benefits of these arrangements, . Thus, tending to raise workplace precarity and contribute to the “hollowing-out” of the middle class in many developed countries[^4].
- Politically, polarization and the influence of extremist parties has been steadily rising in many developed democracies. While the role of the internet-based social media landscape is a topic of significant academic debate, recent surveys suggest that these tools have fallen far short of their promise of strengthening social and political bonds across differences and may well have contributed to the secular rise in polarization since 2000, especially in the United States[^5].
- Legally, the proliferation of financial innovation in the past few decades has led to limited measurable consumer benefits (in terms of risk reduction, capital allocation or access to credit) while increasing risk in much of the financial system and proliferating financial instruments. Hence, challenging or even skirting existing regulatory regimes intended to mitigate these harms[^6]. While innovations surrounding housing finance leading up to the 2008 financial crisis were some of the most impactful examples, perhaps the most extreme (if more contained) case has been the recent activity around digital “crypto” assets and currencies. Given their mismatch for existing regulatory regimes, they have offered pervasive opportunities for speculation, gambling, fraud, regulatory and tax evasion, and other anti-social activities[^7].
- Existentially, there is growing concern that the fragmentation of the social sensemaking and collective action capacity is dangerous in the face of the increasing sophistication of technologies of mass destruction ranging from environmental devastation (e.g., climate change, biodiversity loss, ocean acidification) to more direct weapons (e.g., misaligned artificial intelligences, bioweapons)[^8].Yet even as technology is seen to erode the cohesion of democratic societies, it is also increasingly seen to threaten democracy by strengthening the control of governments and centralizing power in the hands of a small group of private actors.
- Socially, perhaps the most consistent effect of information technology has been to expand the availability and accelerate the spread of information. This has dramatically eroded the sphere of private life, making an increasing range of information publicly available. While such transparency might in principle have a range of social effects, the power to process and make sense of such information has increasingly concentrated in the hands of corporations and firms that have a combination of privileged access to the information and the capital to invest in large scale statistical models (viz. “AI”) to make these data actionable. Furthermore, because these models improve greatly with access to more data and capital, societies where central actors have access to very large pools of both have tended to pull ahead in the perceived “AI race”, putting pressure on all societies to allow such concentration of informational power to compete[^9]. Together, these forces have normalized unprecedented systems of surveillance and centralized control over information flow.
- Legally, the speed and transformative power of recent advances in AI have overwhelmed core rights of many democratic societies, leaving critical choices in the hands of restricted groups of engineers from similar social backgrounds. Intellectual property law and other protections of creative activity have been largely obviated by the capacity of large AI models to “remix and replace” content; privacy regimes have failed to keep up with the explosive spread of information; discrimination law is woefully unsuited to address issues raised by the potential emergent biases of black box AI systems. The engineers who could potentially address these issues, on the other hand, typically work for profit-seeking companies or the defense sector, come overwhelmingly from a very specific educational and demographic background (typically white or Asian, male, atheist, highly educated, etc.). This has challenged the core tenets of democratic legal regimes that aim to represent the will of the broad society they govern[^10].
- Economically, there is growing evidence that AI and the related broader tendency of information technology since the mid-1980s to replace rather than complement (especially low-educated) human labor has been a central factor in the dramatic rise in the share of income accruing to capital (rather than labor) in past decades and thereby has been a core cause of increased income inequality in developed countries.[^11] A rise in market power, mark-ups and (less consistently) industrial concentration around the world has accompanied this decline in labor’s share, particularly in countries and sectors that have most heavily adopted information technology[^12].
- Politically and geopolitically, the above forces have strengthened the hand of authoritarian regimes and political movements against democratic countries. Creating both the tools and incentives for mass surveillance, AI, and other large-scale data processing tools, have made it easier for governments to directly maintain censorship and social control. Indirectly, by concentrating economic power and the levers of social control in a small set of (often corporate) choke points, the increase in capital income and market power and the increasing authority of small groups of engineers have made it easier for authoritarian regimes to manipulate or seize the “commanding heights” of the economy and society when they wish[^13].
Furthermore, these two threats intersect; authoritarian regimes have increasingly harnessed the “chaos” of social media and cryptocurrencies to sow internal division and conflict in democratic countries. Centralized social media platforms have leveraged AI to optimize user engagement with their services, often helping to fuel the centrifugal tendencies of misinformation and opinion clustering. Yet, even when they are not actively complementing each other and may in many ways have opposite philosophies, both forces have pressured democratic societies and helped undermine confidence in them, confidence that is now at its lowest ebb in much of the developed democratic world since it has been measured.
### Democracies’ Hostility to Technology
Yet the hostilities have been far from unidirectional. Democracies have, by and large, returned this hostility, viewing technology increasingly as a monolithic threat rather than the opportunity they once saw it as. Where once the public sector in democratic countries was the global driving force behind the development of information technology (e.g. the first computers, the internet, global positioning satellites), today most democratic governments are focused instead on constraining its development and are failing to respond to both keys and challenges it creates.
This failure has manifested in four ways. First, public opinion in democratic countries and their policy-makers are increasingly hostile to large technology companies and even many technologists, a trend commonly called the “techlash”. Second, democratic countries have significantly reduced their direct investment in the development of information technology. Third, democratic countries have been slow to adopt technology in public sector applications or that require significant public sector participation. Finally, and relatedly, democratic governments have largely failed to address the areas where most technologists believe public participation, regulation, and support are critical to technology advancing in a sustainable way, focusing instead on more historically grounded social and political problems[^14].
Public and policymaker attitudes towards technology took a decidedly negative turn during the 2010s. While at the end of the 2000s and early 2010s, social media and the internet were seen as forces for openness and participation, in the late 2010s they were widely blamed in commentary and to a lesser extent in public opinion surveys for many of the ills listed above [^15].This shift in attitudes has perhaps been most clearly reflected in elite attitudes, with best-selling books on technology, such as Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy O’Neil and *The Age of Surveillance Capitalism* by Shoshanna Zuboff and films like The Social Dilemma, dominating the public conversation and political leaders across the spectrum (e.g., Jeremy Corbyn on the left and Josh Hawley on the right) taking and increasingly pessimistic and aggressive tone on the technology industry. The “Techlash” rose to prominence to describe these concerns. This has been reinforced by the rise of a “cancel culture” that often harnesses social media to attack or reduce the cultural currency of prominent figures and has frequently targeted leaders in the technology industry.
Regulators in both Europe and the United States have responded with a range of actions, including dramatically increased antitrust scrutiny of leading technology companies, a series of regulatory interventions in Europe including the General Data Protection Regulation and the trio of the Data Governance Act, the Digital Markets Act and the Digital Services Act. All these actions have clear policy rationales and could well be part of a positive technology agenda. However, the combination of negative tone, relative disconnection from naturally allied developments in technology and general reticence on the part of commentators and policy-makers in developed democracies to articulate a positive technology vision has created an impression of an industry under siege.
Perhaps the clearest quantitative mark for this declining proactive public interest in information technology has been falling public expenditures on research and development (R&D) as a share of gross domestic product (GDP), especially in information technology. In the great majority of developed democracies, public sector research and development expenditure as a share of GDP has been declining in recent decades even as business spending on R&D has dramatically expanded and spending by the government of Mainland China has dramatically increased as a share of GDP and focused on information technology [^16].
Beyond this quantitative story, the declining appearance of public support for information technology development has been at least as dramatic. Where once the public sector took the lead in developing what became the internet (in the United States), foundations of the personal computer and analogous projects in other democratic countries (e.g., France’s Minitel), today almost all major breakthroughs in information technology are driven by the private sector[^17].
While the original internet was almost entirely developed by the public and academic sectors and based on open standards, Web 2.0 and the recent movements around “Web 3” and decentralized social technologies have received virtually no public support, as governments in democratic countries struggle to explore the potential of digital currencies, payments, and identity systems. While many of the most fundamental advances in computing arose from democratic governments during World War II and the Cold War, today governments have played virtually no role in the breakthroughs in “foundation models” that are revolutionizing computer science. In fact, OpenAI Founders Sam Altman and Elon Musk report having initially sought public funding and only having turned to private, profit-driven sources after being repeatedly turned down; OpenAI went on to develop the Generative Pretrained Transformer (GPT) models that have increasingly captured the public’s imagination about the potential of AI [^18]. Again, this contrasts sharply with authoritarian regimes, like Mainland China, that have laid out and to a large extent successfully deployed ambitious public information technology strategies[^19].
This lack of public sector engagement with technology extends beyond research and development to deployment, adoption, and facilitation. The easiest areas to measure this are the quality and availability of digital connectivity and education. Here the data are somewhat mixed, as many high-functioning democracies (such as the Scandinavian countries) have high quality and high availability internet. But it is striking that leading authoritarian regimes dramatically outperform democracies at similar development levels, especially in the latest connectivity technology. For example, according to Speedtest.net, Mainland China ranks 16th in internet speeds of countries in the world, while only 72nd in income per head; Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies similarly punch above their weight[^20]. Performance on 5G, the latest generation of mobile connectivity, is more dramatic: a range of surveys find China and Saudi Arabia consistently in the top 10 best covered countries by 5G, far above their income levels.
More central to the heart of governmental responsibility in democracies, however, is the digitization of public services.
Digitization of conventional public services is perhaps the least ambitious dimension along which one might expect democracies to advance in adopting technology. Technology has redefined what services are relevant and in these novel areas, democratic governments have almost entirely failed to keep up with changing times. Where once government provided postal services and public libraries were the backbone of democratic communication and knowledge circulation, today most communication flows through social media and search engines. Where once most public gatherings took place in parks and literal public squares, today it is almost a cliché that the public square has moved online. Yet democratic countries have almost entirely ignored the need to provide and support digital public services. While privately-owned Twitter is the target of constant abuse by public figures, its most important competitor, the non-profit Mastodon and the open Activity Pub standard on which it runs have received a paltry few tens of thousands of dollars in public support, running instead on Patreon donations. More broadly, open source software and other commons-based public goods like Wikipedia have become critical public resources in the digital age; yet governments have consistently failed to support them and have even discriminated against them relative to other charities (for example, open source software providers generally cannot be tax-exempt charities). While authoritarian regimes plow ahead with plans for Central Bank Digital Currencies, most democratic countries are only beginning explorations.
Most ambitiously, democracies could, as so many autocracies have been doing, help facilitate radical experiments with how technologies could reshape social structures. Yet, here again, democracy seems so often to stand in the way rather than facilitate such experimentation. China has built cities and reimagined regulations to facilitate driverless cars, such as Shenzhen, and has more broadly built a detailed national technology strategy covering nearly ever aspect of policy, regulation and investment[^21]. Saudi Arabia is busy building a new smart city in the dessert, Neom, to show case a range of green and smart city technology, while even the most modest localized projects in democratic countries, such as Google’s Sidewalk Labs, have been swamped by local opposition.
Even when it comes to areas where technologists agree regulation and caution are critical, democracies are falling further and further behind the needs of the industry to find solutions to emerging social challenges. There is a growing consensus among technologists that a range of emerging technologies may pose catastrophic or even existential risks that will be hard to prevent after they start to emerge. Examples include artificial intelligence systems that could rapidly self-improve their capacities, cryptocurrencies that could pose systemic financial risks, and the development of highly contagious bioweapons. They regularly bemoan the failure of democratic governments to even contemplate much less plan to confront such risks. Yet, beyond these catastrophic possibilities, a whole range of new technologies require regulatory change to be sustainable.. Labor law misfits geographically and temporally flexible work empowered by technology. Copyright is far too rigid to deal with the attribution of value to data inputs to large AI models. Blockchains are empowering new forms of corporate governance that securities laws struggle to make sense of and are often put into legal jeopardy.
Yet while bold experiments with new visions of the public sector are more common in autocracies, there is an element far more fundamental to democracy itself in which it has fallen farthest behind the times: the mechanisms of public consent, participation, and legitimation, including voting, petitioning, soliciting of citizen feedback and so forth are perhaps more frozen in the past than any other aspect of democratic societies. Voting in nearly all democracies occurs for major offices once every several years according to rules and technologies that have been largely unchanged for a century. While citizens communicate instantaneously across the planet, they are represented in largely fixed geographic configurations at great expense with low fidelity. Few modern tools of communication or data analysis are regular parts of the democratic lives of citizens.
At the same time, autocracies have increasingly richly harnessed the latest digital innovations to empower their regimes of surveillance (for good and ill) and social control. For example, the Mainland Chinese government has widely used facial recognition to monitor population movements, has encouraged the adoption of its Digital Yuan and other surveilled digital payments (which cracking down on more private alternatives) to facilitate financial surveillance and even worked on developing a comprehensive “social credit score” that would track a wide range of citizen activities and condense them to a single and widely-consequential “rating”[^22]. For several years, the Russian government has been using facial recognition to determine who is participating in protests and detain them after the fact, allowing it to remove dissenters on a large scale with much lower risks to the regime or its police forces[^35]. These techniques have intensified and have also been used to enforce war conscription[^36] since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
In some sense, democracy is being left behind by technology as much by its neglect of technology, compared to many authoritarian states' eager willingness to embrace it for their own ends, as by any anti-democratic tendencies of technology itself.
### You Get What You Pay For
How did we end up here? Are these conflicts the natural course of technology and of democratic societies? Is a different future possible?
A range of work suggests that technology and democracy could co-evolve in a diversity of ways and that the path we are on is a result of collective choices we’ve made through policies, attitudes, expectations, and culture. The range of possibilities can be seen through a variety of lenses, from science fiction to real-world cases.
Science fiction shows the astonishing range of futures the human mind is capable of imagining. In many cases, these imaginings are the foundation of many of the technologies that researchers and entrepreneurs end up developing. Some of these correspond to the directions we have seen technology take recently. In his 1992 classic, Snow Crash, Neal Stephenson imagines a future where most people have retreated to live much of their lives in an immersive “metaverse”. In the process they undermine the engagement necessary to support real-world communities, governments, and the like, making space for mafias and cult leaders to rule and develop weapons of mass destruction. This future closely corresponds to elements of the “antisocial” threats to Democracy from Technology we discuss above and other writing by Stephenson further extends these possibilities, which have had a profound effect in shaping technology development; for example, Meta’s Platforms is named after Stephenson’s metaverse. Similar examples are possible for the tendency of technology to concentrate power through creating “superintelligences”. Leading examples are the fiction of Isaac Asimov and Ian Banks, the predictive futurism of Ray Kurzweil, and films like Terminator and Her.
But these possibilities are both very different from each other and are far from the only visions of the technological future to be found in sci-fi. In fact, some of the most prominent science fiction shows very different possibilities. Two of the most popular sci-fi television shows of all time, The Jetsons and Star Trek show futures where, respectively, technology has largely reinforced the culture and institutions of 1950s America and one where it has enabled a post-capitalist world of diverse intersecting alien intelligences. But these are two among thousands of examples, from the post-gender and post-state imagination of Urusula LeGuin to the post-colonial futurism of Octavia Butler. All suggest a dizzying range of ways technology could coevolve with society[^23].
But science fiction writers are not alone. The primary theme of the field of Science and Technology Studies (STS), including the philosophy, sociology, and history of science, has been the contingency and possibility inherent in the development of science and technology and the lack of any single necessary direction for their evolution[^24]. These conclusions have been increasingly accepted in social sciences, like political science and economics, that traditionally viewed technology progress as fixed and given. Two of the world’s leading economists, Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson, have recently published a book arguing that the direction of technological progress is a key target for social policy and reform and documenting the historical contingencies that led to the directions of technology we have seen in the past[^25].
Perhaps the most striking illustration comes from comparing the ways technology has advanced across countries today. Where once leading thinkers predicted the power of technology to sweep away social differences, today the technological systems of powers great and sometimes small define their competing social systems as much as their formally stated ideologies: the Mainland Chinese surveillance state looks like one technological future, while the Russian hacking networks seem another, the growing space of Web3 driven communities a third, the mainstream Western capitalist countries on which we have focused a fourth and the heterogeneous digital democracies of India, Estonia, and Taiwan something else entirely that we will explore in depth below. Far from converging, technology seems to be proliferating possible futures.
So, if our current trajectory of technology and social relationship to it in Western liberal democracies is not inevitable, in what ways are we choosing to be on this conflictual path? And how might we get off it?
While there are many ways to describe the choices democratic societies have made about technology, perhaps the most concrete and easiest to quantify are the investment realized. These show clear choices about technological paths that Western liberal democracies (and thus most of the financial capital in the world) have made about investments in the future of technology, many of a quite recent origin. While these have recently been driven primarily by the private sector, they reflect earlier priorities set by governments that are in many ways just beginning to filter through to private sector applications.
Beginning with recent trends in the increasingly well-measured venture capital industry, the last decade has seen a dramatic and overwhelming focus of venture capital within the high technology sector into artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency-adjacent/“Web3” technologies. Figure V displays data on private investment in AI collected by NetBase Quid and charted by the Stanford’s Center for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence’s 2022 AI Index Report, showing its explosive growth over the course of the 2010s, growth that has come to dominate private technology investment; Figure W show the same (over a different time period and quarterly) for the Web3 space based on data from Pitchbook, graphed by Galaxy Digital Research.
<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pluralitybook/plurality/main/figs/private.png" width="100%" alt="Private">
<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pluralitybook/plurality/main/figs/crypto.png" width="100%" alt="Crypto">
**Figure W: Private Crypto/Blockchain investment**
However, while these priorities are relatively recent and appear to emerge from the logic of “the market”, they reflect a much longer-running and collectively direct set of choices. These stem from the investments governments in democratic countries have made. [^26].
These investments are not just choices that could have been made differently; they are quite recent and were made very differently immediately prior. These investments are reflected in the canonical technologies of the last few decades. Artificial intelligence was heralded as a coming revolution throughout much of the 1980s, as reflected in FIGURE HERE FROM GOOGLE NGRAMS showing the relative frequency of this phrase in English books as tracked by Google nGrams, Yet the defining technology of the 1980s was quite opposite: the personal computer that made computing a complement to individual human creativity. The 1990s were haunted by Stephenson’s science fictional imagination of the possibilities of escapist virtual worlds and atomizing cryptography, the connective tissue of the internet swept the world, ushering in an unprecedented age of communication and cooperation. Mobile telephony in the 2000s, social networking in the 2010s, and the scaffolding of remote work in the 2020s…none of these have focused on either cryptographic hypercapitalism or artificial superintelligence.
This reflects, with an extensive lag, the shift in investments made by public sector research funders. While data are imperfect, W. Mitchell Waldrop documents the shift clearly in his classic The Dream Machine: as the United States Defense Departments Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), which funded the ARPANET that grew into the Internet, changed its name to the Defense ARPA (DARPA), it shifted its investment focus as well. It dramatically reduced its focus emphasis on resilient communications and sociotechnical systems and increased its focus on systems viewed as more directly supportive of military aims, including weapons autonomy and cryptography. By 1979, the inaugural ARPA program officer who funded the ARPANET and the world’s first computer science departments, JCR Licklider, was already lamenting the turn of public money away from investments in the critical infrastructure supporting his vision of a network society[^27]. This trend accelerated further during the 1980s, as attention around national defense increasingly narrowed.
### Ideologies of the Twenty-First Century
If the path of technology is not predetermined and instead can be significantly shaped by collective choices regarding investment, how should we think about the flexibility we have as a society in choosing among possible directions? How much scope is there for choice and what do these look like?
One useful way analogy for thinking about choice over directions a society might take is ideologies. We all understand that different societies have chosen or might choose to organize themselves in terms of different (combinations of) ideologies: communism, capitalism, democracy, fascism, theocracy, etc. Each of these incorporates strengths and weaknesses, appeals to some more than to others, and coheres and prescribes to differing degrees. There may be configurations of these ideologies that simply do not work or require specific historical and social conditions.
We might look at different trajectories for technology in a similar way. The range of futures is not unlimited or infinitely malleable: some things are easier, harder, or outright impossible. But neither is it predetermined. There are clusters of plausible visions of the future and technologies that empower these; through our collective technological investments, we help choose among these possibilities.
While a bit less familiar than the linear and progressive story about technology that is most common today, this perspective is very far from original. It is a recurring theme in literature, scholarship, and even entertainment. One striking example is the series of computer games Civilization, in which the player charts a course for a people from prehistory to the future. A defining characteristic of the game is the diversity of possible technological paths and the way these interact with social systems a society may adopt.
The latest entry in the series, Civilization VI, and specifically the “Gathering Storm” expansion pack for it, illustrates our argument quite elegantly. In that game, the “Future Era” features a choice among three ideologies: “Synthetic Technocracy,” “Corporate Libertarianism”, and “Digital Democracy”, with corresponding strengths, weaknesses, and connections to technological development. While the names for each of these are a bit awkward, we will argue in what follows that they do a good job describing in broad strokes, like Communism, Fascism and Democracy in the 20th century, the great techno-ideological debate of our time. We refer to them as “Ideologies of the Twenty-First Century”.
### Artificial Intelligence and Technocracy
The first and most expressed vision of the future of technology centers around Artificial Intelligence (AI) and the way social systems will have to adapt to it; it is captured by the Civilization VI “Synthetic Technocracy” category, but we believe it is more consistent with the views of most advocates to refer to it as “Abundance Technocracy” or AT as we do henceforth.
AT focuses on the potential of AI to create what OpenAI Founder Sam Altman calls “Moore’s Law for Everything”: a transformation where AI makes all material goods cheap and abundant and thus allows the abolition, at least in principle, of material scarcity. Yet this potential abundance may not be equally distributed; it is plausible that its value will concentrate in a small group that controls and directs AI systems. A key element of the AT social vision is therefore material redistribution, usually through a “universal basic income” (UBI). Another central focus is on the risk of AI(s) getting out of human control and threatening human survival, and thus on the need from for strong and often centralized control over how has access to these technologies, as well as ensuring they are built to faithfully execute human desires. While the precise contours differ across the exponents of this view, the idea of “Artificial General Intelligence” (AGI) is central: machines that exceed human capabilities in some generalized way, leaving little measurable utility in human individual or collective cognition.
Leading exponents of this view in Silicon Valley are Sam Altman and his mentor Reid Hoffman and until recently Altman’s OpenAI co-founder Elon Musk. The view is also popular in China, where it has been advanced by Jack Ma, economist Yu Yong-Ding and even by the Mainland’s official New Generation Artificial Intelligence Development Plan with a strong reliance on the Marxist idea of “central planning”. It also appears throughout science fiction, particularly the work of authors like Isaac Asimov and Iain Banks, and futurist writing, especially by Ray Kurzweil and Nicholas Bostrom. Leading organizations aligned with this perspective include OpenAI, DeepMind, and other advanced artificial intelligence projects. The political campaigns of Andrew Yang in the United States helped bring this perspective to the mainstream of politics and AT ideas show up in toned-down forms in much of the thought of the “tech left”, including commentators like Ezra Klein, Matthew Yglesias, and Noah Smith.
### Crypto and Hyper-Capitalism
A second view is much less common in the mainstream media, but has been a dominant theme in the community that has built around Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies and in various related internet communities; it is captured by the Civilization VI “Corporate Libertarianism” category, but its advocates tend to be more comfortable with the label “Entrepreneurial Sovereignty” (ES), which we thus adopt.
ES focuses on the potential (or in some telling inevitability) of cryptography and networking protocols supplanting the role of human collective organization and politics, liberating individuals to participate in unfettered markets free from government and other collective “coercion” and regulation. Fiction has been the central inspiration for ES thinking, including the work of Ayn Rand and Neal Stephenson. Stephenson’s books, especially Snow Crash (1992) and Cryptonomicon (1999), while seemingly and expressly intended as dystopian warnings, have been adopted as blueprints by adherents of ES. Exemplar technologies that show up in these works and have since become central to the ES community are immersive virtual worlds that Stephenson called the “Metaverse”, digital currencies independent of governments, private sovereignties especially based in ungoverned spaces such as floating cities or “sea steads” and strong cryptography as a means of evading collective control/law. The Bitcoin, Web3, 4Chan, and other “peripheral” but influential online communities are core to the social base of the ES perspective.
Perhaps partly because it is less mainstream than AT, ES has a much clearer intellectual canon and set of leaders. The Sovereign Individual by James Dale Davidson and Lord William Rees-Mogg, the writings of Curtis Yarvin under the pen name Mencius Moldbug and The Network State by Balaji Srinavasan are widely read and cited in the community. Venture capitalist Peter Thiel is widely broadly seen as the central intellectual leader, along with others (such as the authors mentioned) whom he has funded or promoted the work of.
ES has a close, but also somewhat complicated, relationship with the nationalist and far-right in democratic countries. On the one hand, most participants identify with this group and support it, to the extent they engage with politics, as illustrated by Thiel’s emergence as a primary financial supporter of Donald Trump and his supporters. In fact, several leading hard right politicians are closely connected to the ES worldview: prominent British Conservative Member of Parliament Jacob Rees-Mogg is the son of Lord William Rees-Mogg, Thiel employs former Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz and Thiel protégés Blake Masters and J. D. Vance ran for Senate in 2022, with the latter winning a seat.
On the other hand, the ES ideology is consistently hostile to nationalism (or any other form of collectivism or solidarity) and ES followers routinely mock and dismiss many core religious, national and culture values associated with the right. This may be resolved by a shared antipathy to what they perceive as dominant left-wing cultural values or by an “accelerationist” attitude as advocated by Yarvin, Donaldson and Rees-Mogg that views the “nationalist backlash” to the inevitable technological trends as an accelerant and possible ally in the dissolution of the nation-state.
<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pluralitybook/plurality/main/figs/golden.png" width="100%" alt="Golden">
**Figure Y, Souree: Roger Gordon, Rise and Fall of American Economic Growth**
### Stagnation and Inequality
These two ideologies have, to a significant extent though often in moderated form, dominated public imagination about the future of technology in most liberal democracies and thus shaped the direction of technology investment for most of the last half-century. While the AT narrative sounds fresh and related to recent progress in AI, related discussions around AI were almost as fever pitched as far back as the 1980s, as illustrated by REFERENCE BAKCWARD TO AI GOOGLE NGRAMS CHART. While the recent discussions around Web3 have raised its profile, ES was arguably at its peak in the 1990s, with John Perry Barlow’s “Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace”, Neal Stephenson’s novels and the publication of The Sovereign Individual.
The radical promises of these visions led many to anticipate dramatic economic and productivity growth from information technology, as well as the waves of privatization, deregulation and tax cuts that went along with them in most liberal democracies beginning roughly half a century ago. Yet these promises are far from bearing fruit and economic analysis increasingly suggests these directions for technology may play a key role in explaining that failure.
Instead of the promised explosion of economic possibility, the last half-century has seen a dramatic deceleration of economic and especially productivity growth. Figure Y shows the growth in the United States of “Total Factor Productivity (TFP)”, economists’ most inclusive measure of the improvement in technology, averaged by decades from the beginning of the 20th century to today. Rates during the mid-century “Golden Age” roughly double their levels both before and after during the period we dub the “Digital Stagnation”. The pattern is even more dramatic in other liberal democratic countries in Europe and in most of democratic Asia, with South Korea and Taiwan notable exceptions.
To make matters worse, this period of stagnation has also been one of dramatically rising inequality, especially in the United States. Figure Z shows average income growth in the US by income percentile during the Golden Age and Great Stagnation respectively. During the Golden Age, income growth was roughly constant across the distribution, but trailed off for top-income earners. During the Digital Stagnation, income growth was higher for higher earners and only exceeded the average level during the Golden Age for those in the top 1%, with even smaller groups earning the great majority of the overall much lower income gains.
<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pluralitybook/plurality/main/figs/income.png" width="100%" alt="Income">
**Figure Z Source: Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman. 2020. “The Rise of Income and Wealth Inequality in America: Evidence from Distributional Macroeconomic Accounts.” Journal of Economic Perspectives**
What has gone so wrong in the last half-century compared to the one before? Economists have studied a range of factors, from the rise of market power and the decline of unions to the progressively greater challenge of innovating when so much has already been invented. But increasing evidence focuses on two factors closely tied to the influence of AT and ES respectively: the shift in the direction of technological progress towards automation and away from labor augmentation and the shift in the direction of policy away from proactively shaping industrial development and relations and towards an assumption that “free markets know best”.
On the first point, in a series of recent papers, Acemoglu, Pascual Restrepo, and collaborators have documented the shift in the direction of technical progress from the Golden Age to the Digital Stagnation. Figure A summarizes their results, plotting cumulative changes in productivity over time from labor automation (what they call “displacement”) and labor augmentation (what they call “reinstatement”)[^28]. During the Golden Age, reinstatement roughly balanced displacement, leaving the share of income going to workers essentially constant. During the Digital Stagnation, however, displacement has slightly accelerated while reinstatement has dramatically fallen, leading to slower overall productivity growth and a significant reduction in the share of income going to workers. Furthermore, their analysis shows that the inegalitarian effects of this imbalance have been exacerbated by the concentration of displacement among low-skilled workers.
<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pluralitybook/plurality/main/figs/displace.png" width="100%" alt="Displace">
**Figure A: Acemoglu and Restrepo. 2019. “Automation and New Tasks: How Technology Displaces and Reinstates Labor.” Journal of Economic Perspectives.**
The role of “neoliberal” policies in contributing to the stagnation and inequality of this period is widely debated and we suspect most readers have formed their own views on the matter. One of us was also co-author of a book that contains a review of the evidence as of roughly a decade ago[^29]. We will thus not go into detail here and refer readers to instead to that or other related writing[^30]. However, clearly, the defining ideological and policy direction of this period was an embrace of capitalist market economics, often closely tied to claims that such an embrace was necessitated by the globalization of technology and the resulting impossibility of collective governance/action that is core to the ES ideology. The, largely failed, last half-century of technology and policy has thus been characterized by the dominance of AT in the sphere of technology and ES in the sphere of policy.
Of course, the last half century has hardly been devoid of technological breakthroughs that have genuinely brought about positive, if uneven and sometimes fraught, transformations. Personal computers empowered unprecedented human creativity in the 1980s; the internet allowed communication and connection across previously unimaginable distances in the 1990s; smartphones integrated these two revolutions and made them ubiquitous in the 2000s. Yet, it is striking that none of these most canonical innovations of our time fit neatly into the AT or ES stories. They were clearly all technologies that augmented human creativity, often called “intelligence augmentation” or IA, rather than AI. Yet neither were they envisioned primarily as tools to escape existing social institutions; they facilitated rich communication and connection rather than market transactions, private property, and secrecy. As we will see, these technologies emerged from a very different tradition than either of these two. Thus, even the few major technological leaps in this period were largely independent of or in contrast to these visions.
### Our Fraying Social Contract
Yet the economic conditions surrounding the embrace of AT and ES are only the easiest to quantify and thus most headline-grabbing. Deeper, more insidious, and ultimately more damaging have been the corrosion of the confidence, faith, and trust on which social support of both democracy and technology rest.
Faith in democratic institutions has been falling, especially in the last decade and a half in all democracies, but especially in the US and developing democracies. In the US, dissatisfaction with democracy has gone from being the opinion of a fringe (less than 25%) to being the majority opinion in the last 3 decades[^31]. While it is less consistently measured, faith in technology, especially leading technology companies, has been similarly declining. In the US, the technology sector has fallen from being considered the most sector in the economy in the early and mid 2010s to amongst the least trusted, based on surveys by organizations like the Public Affairs Council, Morning Consult, Pew Research and Edelman Trust Barometer [^32].
These concerns have spilled out more broadly to a general loss of faith in a range of social institutions. The fraction of Americans expressing high confidence in several leading institutions (including organized religions, federal governments, public schools, media, and law enforcement) has fallen to roughly half its level when such surveys began, around the end of the Golden Age in most cases[^33]. Trends in Europe are more moderate and the global picture is uneven, but the general trend towards declining institutional confidence in democratic countries is widely accepted[^34].
### Reclaiming our Future
Technology and democracy are trapped between two sides of a widening gulf. That war is damaging both sides of the conflict, undermining democracy and slowing technological development. As collateral damage, it is slowing economic growth, undermining confidence in social institutions, and fueling inequality. This conflict is not inevitable; it is the product of the technological directions liberal democracies have collectively chosen to invest in, once fueled by ideologies about the future that are antithetical to democratic ideals. Because political systems depend on technologies to thrive, democracy cannot thrive if we continue down this path.
Another path is possible. Technology and democracy can be each other’s greatest allies. In fact, as we will argue, large-scale democracy (or, as Civilization VI would call it, Digital Democracy) is a dream we have only begun to imagine, one that requires unprecedented technology to have any chance of being realized. By reimagining our future, shifting public investments, research agendas, and private development, we can build a that future. In the rest of this book, we hope to show you how.
[^1]: Cite Acemoglu and Robinson. ”The narrow corridor: How nations struggle for liberty”. D Acemoglu, JA Robinson - 2019
[^2]: Such relationships differ from those established in markets, which are based on bilateral, transactional exchange in a “universal” currency, as they denominate value in units based on local value and trust.
[^3]: Gray, Out in the Country 2009. O’Day and Heinberg 2021. Allcott et al., 2020.
[^4]: Cite Gray and Suri, Autor. ”Ghost work: How to stop Silicon Valley from building a new global underclass” ML Gray, S Suri - 2019
[^5]: Levitsky, S. & Ziblatt, D. (2018). How Democracies Die. Crown. Mounk, Y. (2018). The People vs. Democracy: Why Our Freedom Is in Danger and How to Save It. Harvard University Press. Sunstein, C. R. (2017). #Republic: Divided. Democracy in the Age of Social Media. Princeton University Press. Jamieson, K. H. & Capella, J. N. (2008). Echo Chamber: Rush Limbaugh and the Conservative Media Establishment. Oxford University Press.
[^6]: Simsek, A. (2021). The Macroeconomics of Financial Speculation. The Annual Review of Economics, 13, p.335-69
[^7]: "The Dark Side of Cryptocurrencies: How to Tackle the Challenges" by Chee-Wee Tan and Shan-Ling Pan (2019)"Crypto-asset market surveillance" by the Financial Stability Board (2020), "Cryptocurrencies and the Future of Money" by Carlo Gola and Andrea Nodari (2018), "Regulating Cryptocurrencies: Insights from a Survey of Central Banks" by Jon Frost and Adam Aitken (2018), "Cryptocurrencies and the Global Financial System: An Overview" by Michael Kumhof and Clara Vega (2018), "Cryptocurrencies: A Primer" by C. Eugene Steuerle and Caleb Quakenbush (2019) "Crypto-currencies: An Innovative but Unstable Financial Asset" by Paola Lucantoni and Niclas Werthén (2019) "Regulating Cryptocurrencies: Analyzing Existing and Proposed Legal Frameworks" by Frank Pasquale (2019), "Crypto-Assets: Implications for Financial Stability, Monetary Policy, and Payment Systems" by the International Monetary Fund (2018)"The Challenges of Regulating Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain Technology" by Ansgar Belke and Dominik Supplieth (2019)
[^8]: Harris, T. (2016). How technology hijacks people’s minds : from a magician and Google’s design ethicist. [online] Medium. Available at: https://medium.com/@tristanharris/how-technology-hijacks-peoples-minds-from-a-magician-and-google-s-design-ethicist-56d62ef5edf3 [Accessed 21 Feb. 2023]. Harris, T. (2018). Time well spent. [online] Time Well Spent. Available at: https://www.timewellspent.io/ [Accessed 21 Feb. 2023]. Schmachtenberger, D. (2017). The War on Sensemaking, Daniel Schmachtenberger at the "Reawakening Our Human Sense-Making" conference. [online] YouTube. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fjKdVxPwmM [Accessed 21 Feb. 202 Schmachtenberger, D. (2020). Civilization Emergence. [online] Civilization Emerging. Available at: https://civilizationemerging.com/ [Accessed 21 Feb. 2023].
[^9]: The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power" by Shoshana Zuboff (2019);"Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy" by Cathy O'Neil (2016); "The Big Data Opportunity in Our Driverless Future" by Evangelos Simoudis (2018); "Artificial Intelligence and Economic Growth" by Philippe Aghion, Mathias Dewatripont, and Julian Kolev (2019); "The Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future" by Martin Ford (2015); "AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order" by Kai-Fu Lee (2018); "The Transparent Society: Will Technology Force Us to Choose Between Privacy and Freedom?" by David Brin (1998); "Digital Privacy, Playful Media, and Miscommunication: Why Privacy Matters" by Kari Kraus (2019) "Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism" by Safiya Umoja Noble (2018) "Automating Inequality: How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police, and Punish the Poor" by Virginia Eubanks (2017)
[^10]: Josh Simons Algorithms of Oppression 2023; Artificial Unintelligence: How Computers Misunderstand the World" by Meredith Broussard (2018); "Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy" by Cathy O'Neil (2016); "Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code" by Ruha Benjamin (2019); "Automating Inequality: How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police, and Punish the Poor" by Virginia Eubanks (2018); "The Politics of the Artificial: Essays on Design and Design Studies" edited by Victor Margolin and Sylvia Margolin (2017); "Toward a Critical Race Methodology in Algorithmic Fairness" by Josh Simons, et al. (2021); "Decolonizing AI: Toward a More Ethical and Just AI" by Os Keyes, et al. (2020); "The Intersection of AI and Human Rights: Opportunities and Challenges" by Nicole Ozer and Steven Feldstein (2020)
[^11]: "The Race Between Machine and Man: Implications of Technology for Growth, Factor Shares, and Employment" by Daron Acemoglu and Pascual Restrepo (2018); "Capitalism without Capital: The Rise of the Intangible Economy" by Jonathan Haskel and Stian Westlake (2018); "The Rise of the Machines: Automation, Horizontal Innovation and Income Inequality" by Daron Acemoglu and Pascual Restrepo (2018) ; "The Economics of Artificial Intelligence: An Agenda" by Ajay Agrawal, Joshua Gans, and Avi Goldfarb (2018); "The Impact of Artificial Intelligence - Widespread Job Losses" by Kai-Fu Lee (2021) ; "Skill Biased Technical Change and Rising Wage Inequality: Some Problems and Puzzles" by David Autor (2014)
[^12]: "The Rise of Market Power and the Macroeconomic Implications" by Jan De Loecker and Jan Eeckhout, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2017.; "The Race Between Man and Machine: Implications of Technology for Growth, Factor Shares and Employment" by Daron Acemoglu, American Economic Review, 2019.; "The Cost of Convenience: Ridehailing and Traffic Fatalities" by John Barrios, Yael Hochberg, and Hanyi Yi, Journal of Political Economy, 2020. "Firming Up Inequality" by David Autor, David Dorn, Lawrence F. Katz, Christina Patterson, and John Van Reenen, Centre for Economic Performance Discussion Paper, 2020. "The Increasing Dominance of Large Firms" by Gustavo Grullon, Yelena Larkin, and Roni Michaely, Review of Financial Studies, 2019.; "The Digital Economy, Business Dynamism and Productivity Growth" by Chad Syverson, National Bureau of Economic Research, 2018.; "Industrial Concentration in the Age of Digital Platforms" by Fiona Scott Morton, Yale Law Journal, 2019.;"The Failure of Free Entry" by Philippe Aghion, Antonin Bergeaud, Timo Boppart, Peter Klenow, and Huiyu Li, Review of Economic Studies, 2019.; "The Capitalist Machine: Computerization, Workers' Power, and the Decline in Labor's Share within U.S. Industries" by Shouyong Shi and Wei Cui, Journal of Political Economy, 2021.
"Competition and Market Power in the Era of the Big Five" by Thomas Philippon, American Economic Review, 2021.
[^13]: AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order by Kai-Fu Lee; The Dictator's Dilemma: The Chinese Communist Party's Strategy for Survival by Bruce J. Dickson; The Cost of Connection by Nick Couldry and Ulysses Mejias; "Artificial Intelligence and National Security" by Paul Scharre "The New Digital Authoritarianism: Xi Jinping's Vision for the Future of Governance" by Samantha Hoffman "Data Colonialism: Rethinking Big Data's Relation to the Contemporary Subject" by Jack Linchuan Qiu "The Future of Power in the Digital Age" by Taylor Owen and Ben Scott "The Rise of Digital Repression: How Technology is Reshaping Power, Politics, and Resistance" by Steven Feldstein.
[^14]: OpenForumEurope.org Open Tech Communitythe European Commission published a study on the impact of open source software (OSS)The fear of strict control of data in the EU a few years ago this has led to a lack of competition and innovation, as well as an increased risk of the market. Now, we can see more investments in OSS. This is also thanks to the steps of innovation in many eastern European countries. If the country fails to maintain and keep its investment in digital tech to connect people or public sector things, it will cause a huge loss in future including democratic pluralism. Conically we are seeing the importance of digital OSS in the war between Ukraine and Russia.
[^15]: https://news.gallup.com/poll/329666/views-big-tech-worsen-public-wants-regulation.aspx but see also https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/IP_21_4645 https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2022/03/17/ai-and-human-enhancement-americans-openness-is-tempered-by-a-range-of-concerns/ https://deliverypdf.ssrn.com/delivery.php?ID=378070074070096106120096075093127076009075022081036087078089015067078006091125065007021011006001039100019103096003108083114089116049039081035024111121091071093107025069011095094068091120007107065101126071008081003028090028030076083084111115121117089072&EXT=pdf&INDEX=TRUE
[^16]: Possible sources: "The Innovation Illusion: How So Little is Created by So Many Working So Hard" by Fredrik Erixon and Bjorn Weigel (2016), "The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The U.S. Standard of Living since the Civil War" by Robert J. Gordon (2016)
"The Future of Employment: How Susceptible Are Jobs to Computerisation?" by Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael A. Osborne (2013)
"The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant Technologies" by Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee (2014)
"Innovation and Its Enemies: Why People Resist New Technologies" by Calestous Juma (2016)
"The Limits of the Market: The Pendulum between Government and Market" by Paul de Grauwe and Anna Asbury (2017)
Data:
https://data.oecd.org/rd/gross-domestic-spending-on-r-d.htm
https://www.oecd.org/sti/msti-highlights-march-2022.pdf
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=R%26D_expenditure&oldid=590306
[^17]: For example, even public interest open source code is mostly invested in by private actors, though recently the US Government has made some efforts to support that sector with the launch of code.gov.
[^18]: Altman interview with Ezra Klein….NEED FORMAL CITE
[^19]: "Made in China 2025: The Industrial Plan that China Doesn't Want to Talk About" by Usha C. V. Haley and George T. Haley (2018); "China's Economic Transformation: Lessons, Impact, and the Path Forward" edited by Zhiwu Chen and Chun Chang (2021); "Innovation in China: Challenging the Global Science and Technology System" edited by Cong Cao (2019); "The Digital Silk Road: China's Information Capitalism and Its Geopolitical Implications" by Winston Ma (2020); "The State, Business and Education: Public-Private Partnerships Revisited" edited by Anthony Welch and Xiaobing Wang (2020)
[^20]: THIS STILL NEEDS LOTS MORE WORK BUT HERE ARE SOME SOURCES: "Digital Disconnect: How Capitalism is Turning the Internet Against Democracy" by Robert W. McChesney (2013) "The Internet Trap: How the Digital Economy Builds Monopolies and Undermines Democracy" by Matthew Hindman (2018) "The Hacked World Order: How Nations Fight, Trade, Maneuver, and Manipulate in the Digital Age" by Adam Segal (2016) "Information Wars: How We Lost the Global Battle Against Disinformation and What We Can Do About It" by Richard Stengel (2019)"The Attention Merchants: The Epic Scramble to Get Inside Our Heads" by Tim Wu (2017)
[^21]: “Chinese 14th 5-Year-Plan for National Informatization, available in English and Mandarin at https://digichina.stanford.edu/work/translation-14th-five-year-plan-for-national-informatization-dec-2021/.
[^22]: CITES HERE.
[^23]: "The Future of Another Timeline" by Annalee Newitz (2019); "Walkaway" by Cory Doctorow (2017); "Infomocracy" by Malka Older (2016); "The Power" by Naomi Alderman (2016); "The Three-Body Problem" by Cixin Liu (2008); "The Windup Girl" by Paolo Bacigalupi (2009);"The Diamond Age" by Neal Stephenson (1995); "The Peripheral" by William Gibson (2014); "Snow Crash" by Neal Stephenson (1992)
[^24]: "The Technological Society" by Jacques Ellul (1964). "The Social Shaping of Technology" by Donald A. MacKenzie and Judy Wajcman (2018); "The Cybernetic Brain: Sketches of Another Future" by Andrew Pickering (2010); "The Social Construction of Technological Systems: New Directions in the Sociology and History of Technology" by Wiebe E. Bijker, Thomas P. Hughes, and Trevor Pinch (2012); "The Philosophy of Science and Technology Studies" by Steve Fuller (2006); "Technics and Civilization" by Lewis Mumford (2010)
[^25]: Power and Progress: Our Thousand-Year Struggle Over Technology and Prosperity
[^26]: According to a report by the research and advisory company Gartner, worldwide government spending on AI is expected to reach 37 billion in 2021, a 22.4% increase from the previous year. - China leads the world in AI investment: Chinese companies invested 25 billion in AI in 2017, compared to 9.7 billion in the US.In 2021, the US Senate passed a 250 billion bill that includes $52 billion for semiconductor research and development, which is expected to boost the country's AI capabilities. Additionally, in the same year, the European Union announced an 8.3 billion investment in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and supercomputers as part of its Digital Decade plan.In 2021, the Bank of Japan started experimenting with central bank digital currency (CBDC) and China's central bank launched a digital yuan trial program in several cities.
[^27]: Licklider, “Computers and Government”
[^28]: Acemoglu and Restrepo, 2019, Journal of Economic Perspectives. Note that the precise Golden Age-Digital Stagnation cutoff differs across these studies, but it is always somewhere during the 1970s or 1980s.
[^29]: Posner and Weyl, Radical Markets
[^30]: "The Great Reversal: How America Gave Up on Free Markets" by Thomas Philippon (2019), “The Myth of Capitalism: Monopolies and the death of Competition” by Tepper with Hearn.
[^31]: Cambridge Center for Future of Democracy
[^32]: . According to the 2021 Edelman Trust Barometer, only 57% of global respondents trust technology as a reliable source of information. This represents a decline of 4 points from the previous year's survey. A 2020 survey by Pew Research Center found that 72% of Americans believe that social media companies have too much power and influence over the news that people see. Additionally, 51% of respondents said they were very or somewhat concerned about the role of technology in political polarization. A 2019 survey by the Center for the Governance of AI at the University of Oxford found that only 33% of Americans believe that tech companies are generally trustworthy. In a 2020 survey of 9,000 people in nine countries, conducted by Ipsos MORI, only 30% of respondents said that they trust social media companies to behave responsibly with their data.
These data points suggest that there is a growing sense of skepticism and concern about the role of technology in society, including its impact on democracy. (1)2022-12-06 survey by PEW` research,19-country.
Social Media Seen as Mostly Good for Democracy Across Many Nations, But U.S. is a Major Outlier:
Pew Research shows, ordinary citizens see social media as both a constructive and destructive component of political life, and overall most believe it has actually had a positive impact on democracy. Across the countries polled, a median of 57% say social media has been more of a good thing for their democracy, with 35% saying it has been a bad thing. There are substantial cross-national differences on this question, however, and the United States is a clear outlier: Just 34% of U.S. adults think social media has been good for democracy, while 64% say it has had a bad impact. In fact, the U.S. is an outlier on a number of measures, with larger shares of Americans seeing social media as divisive.
(2) 2020,survey by OAIC.
many consumer respondents to a recent Australian survey (58%) admitted they do not understand what firms do with the data they collect, and 49% feel unable to protect their data due to a lack of knowledge or time, as well as the complexity of the processes involved (OAIC, 2020).
(3)2022-09-01 by WHO “Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram are critical in disseminating the rapid and far-reaching spread of information,” the systematic review explains. The repercussions of misinformation on social media include such negative effects as “an increase in erroneous interpretation of scientific knowledge, opinion polarization, escalating fear and panic or decreased access to health care”. (4) by the PEW,Concerns about democracy in the digital age WOULD BE GREAT TO FIND SOME OLDER DATA FOR A BASELINE….
[^33]: https://news.gallup.com/poll/1597/confidence-institutions.aspx
[^34]: https://www.un.org/development/desa/dspd/2021/07/trust-public-institutions/ and Kolczynska, Bürkner, Kennedy and Vehtari
[^35]: Reuters, "Face control: Russian police go digital against protesters", available at https://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-politics-navalny-tech-idUSKBN2AB1U2. See also https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-dissent-cctv-detentions-days-later-strategy/31227889.html
[^36]: Human Rights Watch, "Russia Uses Facial Recognition to Hunt Down Draft Evaders
", available at https://www.hrw.org/news/2022/10/26/russia-uses-facial-recognition-hunt-down-draft-evaders