How can we accelerate the human transformation required to keep pace with
accelerating technological innovation and disruption? How can we avoid massive
social
dislocation, or worse? Lest we be accused of being technology determinists or
utopians, may we propose that it’s time for a new social contract for the digital age.
Governments, the private sector, the civil society, and individuals need to collaborate
to forge new common understandings.
As we enter this second generation of the Internet, it’s time for a Manifesto for the
Digital Age. Call it a Declaration of Interdependence. Digital age citizens have
Rights
—access to digital infrastructures,
literacy, media literacy, lifelong learning, and
renewed freedom of speech online without the fear of surveillance.
The digital economy and society should be governed according to
Principles.
Surely, those who work should share in the wealth they create. If computers can do
the work, then the workweek, not our standard of living, should be reduced. In fact,
Satoshi’s implicit design principles for the blockchain revolution should serve us well
—we need institutions that act with integrity,
security, privacy, inclusion, rights
protection, and distributed power. Let’s work to distribute opportunity and prosperity
at the point of origin, rather than simply redistributing wealth after it’s been created
by traditional class structures.
Blockchain technology may reduce the costs and size of government, but we’ll
still need new
Laws in many areas. There are technological and business model
solutions to the challenges of intellectual property and rights ownership. So we should
be rewriting or trashing old laws that stifle innovation through overprotection of
patents. Better antitrust action must stem the trend toward
monopolies so that no one
overpays for, say, basic Internet or financial services. Eighty percent of Americans
have no choice when it comes to Internet service providers, which might help explain
why bandwidth is one of the slowest and most expensive in the developed world.
Criminal fixers who manipulate everything from foreign exchange to diesel emissions
should be prosecuted and punished appropriately.
We’ll need
Institutional Transformation across the board. Central banks will need
to change their role in currency management and monetary policy and collaborate
multilaterally with more stakeholders in the economy and society. We need schools
and universities
with student-focused, customized collaborative mastery of
information on the blockchain, freeing up students and teachers alike to participate in
small group discussion and projects. We need a universal patient record on the
blockchain, to ensure collaborative health when we can manage our own wellness
outside of the system. When we enter the health care system, we should not suffer
because of ignorance-inspired drug interactions or medicine not based on evidence.
Politicians will need to adapt to a transparent world where smart contracts ensure their
accountability to electorates. How do we manage
the disruption after digital
currencies upend the $500 billion remittances market?
Blockchain technology can enable new
Physical Infrastructures requiring new
partnerships and understandings among stakeholders. What happens to the millions of
Uber drivers when SUber wipes out their jobs? What can cities do to ensure that in
2025 citizens think positively about intelligent transportation systems? How do we
effectively move to a distributed blockchain-enabled electrical power grid where
home owners are contributors rather than just customers of electricity? How will we
find the leadership to implement a blockchain-enabled
personal carbon trading
system?
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