The Macrosite for News, Analysis and Opinion about the Future of the Internet
Andrew Keen

Economy to Give Open-Source a Good Thumping

Written by Andrew Keen
10/21/2008 34 comments
DISCUSS     Email This

When we think of the Great Depression, we imagine long lines of gaunt men, caps in hand, waiting for soup handouts. The equivalent photos of today's economic hard times -- displayed for free, of course, on Flickr -- may be represented by images of unemployed people in front of their computers cheerfully donating their labor to Wikipedia.

Unfortunately, there is no doubt that a lot of Americans are suddenly going to have a lot of extra time on their hands to donate their labor for free. Unemployment in America is already at a five-year high of 6.1 percent, with leading economists like 2008's Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman predicting that it will be "certain" to rise to 7 percent and "quite possibly" to 8 percent as the depressing economic implications of the Wall Street financial meltdown crawl up Main Street. As Krugman wrote, with unvarnished Hobbesian honesty, in The New York Times earlier this month, "All signs point to an economic slump that will be nasty, brutish -- and long."

So much for the good news. Hundreds of thousands, and perhaps millions, of newly redundant Americans will have nothing to do all day except contribute to wikis or become citizen journalists or "work" on their Facebook or MySpace pages. In an America where one in 10 adults are out of work, will Wired editor-in-chief Chris Anderson's free economic model revolutionize the nature of work? Is $0.00 really the future of labor in an age of mass unemployment?

Of course not. One of the very few positive consequences of the current financial miasma will be a sharp cultural shift in our attitude toward the economic value of our labor. Mass unemployment and a deep economic recession comprise the most effective antidote to the utopian ideals of open-source radicals. The altruistic ideal of giving away one's labor for free appeared credible in the fat summer of the Web 2.0 boom when social-media startups hung from trees, Facebook was valued at $15 billion, and VCs queued up to fund revenue-less "businesses" like Twitter. But as we contemplate the world post-bailout, when economic reality once again bites, only Silicon Valley’s wealthiest technologists can even consider the luxury of donating their labor to the latest fashionable, online, open-source project.

In his best-selling book, Predictably Irrational, MIT behavorial economist Dan Ariely suggests that most of us are irrational when it comes to determining the value of our labor. I’m not sure. I may not have Ariely’s grasp of behavorial economics, but I’m pretty sure, if not certain, that the idea of free labor will suddenly become profoundly unpalatable to someone faced with their house being repossessed or their kids going hungry. Being paid to work is intuitive to the human condition; it represents our most elemental sense of justice.

So how will today's brutal economic climate change the Web 2.0 "free" economy? It will result in the rise of online media businesses that reward their contributors with cash; it will mean the success of Knol over Wikipedia, Mahalo over Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), TheAtlantic.com over the HuffingtonPost.com, iTunes over MySpace, Hulu LLC over YouTube Inc. , Playboy.com over Voyeurweb.com, TechCrunch over the blogosphere, CNN’s professional journalism over CNN’s iReporter citizen-journalism... The hungry and cold unemployed masses aren’t going to continue giving away their intellectual labor on the Internet in the speculative hope that they might get some "back end" revenue. "Free" doesn’t fill anyone’s belly; it doesn’t warm anyone up.

When, in 50 years time, the definitive histories of the Web 2.0 epoch are written, historians will look back at the open-source mania between 2000 and 2008 with a mixture of incredulity and amusement. How could tens of thousands of people have donated their knowledge to Wikipedia or the blogosphere for free? What was it about the Internet that made so many of us irrational about our economic value? It was a "mania," these mid-21st-century historians will explain, like the Dutch Tulip mania of the 1630s or South Sea Bubble of 1720 -- a mania that ended with the great crash of October 2008.

— Andrew Keen, Silicon Valley author, broadcaster, and entrepreneur

DISCUSS     Email This
Current display:       newest comments first       display in chronological order
Page 1 of 4   Next >
Joe_Earhart
IQ Crew
Tuesday April 7, 2009 10:05:48 AM
no ratings

There was an article posted at Price Waterhouse and Cooper today... discussing the legislation where Senetor J. Rockefeller sponsored an amendment to the 20 Billion dollar economic stimulus bill calling for the government "to explore open-source technologies in the healthcare setting. The provision directs the Health and Human Services Department to conduct a report on the “availability of open-source health information technology systems.”

So maybe the economic thumping - and an open minded government - may be about to give open source technologies a real chance instead.

aleclynch
Rank: Cave Painter
Sunday March 8, 2009 9:33:26 AM
no ratings

Why are you comparing today's economic conditions with the "Dutch Tulip mania of the 1630s or South Sea Bubble of 1720"?  That is like comparing Facebook to the first Ford Motor Car because they both start with the letter 'f'.

Community driven sites, collective intelligence and crowdsourcing are:

1) Creating innovation and better products.  People read information on wikipedia and buy t-shirts from threadless.com because these sites provide better information or a better product.  You have completely ignored the buyer / user side of these services and marketplaces.  There are key benefits which help the individual and the economy.  A better educated public, a better logo design, a better photograph from istockphoto or a better snippet of software code from TopCoder.  These things drive better businesses that can in-turn make more money.

2) Utilising people's spare time that they would've otherwise used in a less productive way (like playing Sudoku).  They probably did not quit their jobs to become a professional blogger and if they did, someone else took their job and they started making money from the blogging.

Alec Lynch

Founder of DesignBay.com

meowchow
Rank: Cave Painter
Wednesday October 29, 2008 1:14:10 PM
no ratings

You're asserting:

- Unemployed people during a depression "donate their labor for free"

- Unemployed people during a depression "contribute to wikis or become citizen journalists or "work" on their Facebook or MySpace pages"

- People who already donate their time will become unemployed during depression.  ... and asuming they are employed already

- "giving away one's labor for free appeared credible ...when social-media startups hung from trees..."  What the?

- Using a social media site is work

You are awesome. Made me lol. Why waste time here? Go contribute to theonion, someone might think youre being serious here.

Adamus
Rank: Scrivener
Wednesday October 29, 2008 5:32:57 AM

Hey, isn't Andrew Keen the guy that wrote that horrible, silly, inaccurate piece of drivel called The Cult of The Amateur?

Ah yes, he sure is. It appears he hasn't learned his lesson and contunues to pollute the interweb with his own amateurish rantings. And somehow manages to maintain a consistent level of inaccuracy and silliness.

venomfang
Rank: Cave Painter
Friday October 24, 2008 2:09:54 PM

Andrew,

You might want to rethink your comment of:

"although I wouldn't be surprised to see the open source economy dramatically   shrunk by the Wall Street meltdown. why will software developers continue to work on projects like LINUX for free?"

The reason is quite simple when you take a look at who is using linux, these links should help:

http://www.linux.org/info/linux_govt.html

http://www.lugod.org/presentations/ca4h/who_uses.html

Hmm...  Lets see; the US Navy, the NSA, the FBI, NASA, State of Mississippi, LucusFilms, Dreamworks, 1&1 Internet Inc.  I'm sure if I wanted to I could find alot more.

It is companies, governmnets, and orgranizations like these that will continue to work on projects like these, and vendos that are supplying these people and groups as well.

Also here's alittle something that you might want to consider the next time you jump on any airplane:

http://www.gcn.com/online/vol1_no1/40633-1.html

The FAA is trusting linux to run it's servers of the air traffic control division.

 

lpricci49
Rank: Cave Painter
Thursday October 23, 2008 8:26:08 PM

There is a counter force; we may get a new wave of me-too open source projects.

Before people loose their job, they are useually unemployed in place for a year or more before the bean counters catch up to them.

During this period, many of these under-employed in our industry engage in what I call 'occupational hobbies'.  The biggest occupational hobby out there is open source software.  So they diddle and diddle for months and months on 'free' software to provide some new 'feature' on some non-value add me too CMS or something. And why they a done? 

See- it is 'free'

Lawrence Ricci
www.EmbeddedInsider.com

bugmenot
Rank: Web master
Thursday October 23, 2008 6:48:55 PM

"Sounds to me like you all this itching is turning you into a digital utopian. I like to keep all my work in the closet and not share. I've yet to see much evidence that sharing my work makes me any wealthier..."

 

Here's the thing, judging by this post and your responses-- your work isn't worth any money in the first place. Please-- in the future, keep it in the closet.

Mr. Roques
Researcher
Thursday October 23, 2008 3:14:15 PM
no ratings

Well, that's true but you are leaving some things behind.

2% increase in the unemployment rate, represents 6million people (and quite possibly their families, probably not entirely but will have an impact)

In more economic terms, there's number economists talk about, the natural rate of unemployment - which is a balance that holds the rest of the economy in place (mainly, inflation and interests rates). So it's not only that those unemployed won't receive income but the economy takes a toll from that person's ability to produce (not reacing the production potential).

And I agree, that Andrew's post was considering a more tragic effect. I don't develop any open-source software but I think that if I did, and saw that my income from my job aren't enough (or that I get fired) I would need to do something that brings the food to the table - the bottom line.

Or is a company that has a 100% customer service satisfaction but a negative economic profit, successful?

BG the TB
Rank: Cave Painter
Thursday October 23, 2008 2:41:40 PM

 

Andrew,

I believe you might be discounting the concept of "free" labor as investment.

There are a number of rationales for why people contribute free content to Web 2.0, not all of which are 100% altruistic.

Sure, we all like to contribute to the greater good, hoping that the knowledge we offer may be useful to others within the community. Whenever I post to an e-mail list, blog, etc., I get the satisfaction of knowing that the information I'm disseminating may very well have a positive impact on someone out there. It makes me feel good to know that I've helped someone...unsolicited "thank you's" really make my day.

But spending time generating information without direct compensation has benefits beyond the warm-and-fuzzy feelings one gets from thank-you notes. Name recognition is a valuable commodity. If you have good ideas, and express them well, people will remember your name. And name recognition will pay dividends. I've written a book, taught university courses, and done consulting work all due to the fact that people associate my name with thoughtful work. And I'm pretty sure that, were I in the market for another job, that name recognition would be a plus. I've been courted for other jobs, and I'm pretty sure these feelers wouldn't be there if it weren't for that name recognition.

 I'm certainly not famous. But a lot of people in my field have heard of me. And in the long run name recognition is an asset. Laboring without compensation can be a very real investment in one's future.

BG the TB
Rank: Cave Painter
Thursday October 23, 2008 1:51:53 PM

 

Andrew's major point seems to be that out-of-work people will stop contributing free content to websites since they will need money to survive.

He mentions Paul Krugman's prediction that US unemployment may go as high as 8% before things get better. Maybe I don't understand economics, but doesn't 8% unemployment mean that 92% of the workforce will still have jobs? Even during the Great Depression, unemployment was, what, 20%? Wouldn't that mean four out of five people were still employed? I'm thinking you'd need unemployment to be much higher than the Great Depression before Andrew's's predictions had any real chance of playing out.

And I don't understand the Mahalo/Google comparison. People don't contribute free labor to Google, do they?

Page 1 of 4   Next >
The ThinkerNet does not reflect the views of TechWeb. The ThinkerNet is an informal means of communication to members and visitors of the Internet Evolution site. Individual authors are chosen by Internet Evolution to blog. Neither Internet Evolution nor TechWeb assume responsibility for comments, claims, or opinions made by authors and ThinkerNet bloggers. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose.
previous posts from Andrew Keen
Andrew Keen
Andrew Keen   9/9/2011   12 comments
Welcome to the zettabyte era, an age of increasingly wireless connectivity in which the gigabyte equivalent of every motion picture ever produced will travel across the Internet every five minutes. According to a Cisco white paper, global IP traffic, having increased eightfold over the last five years, will ascend to this zettabyte (one billion terabytes) peak by 2015. And by then, there will be more than 8 million households in the terabyte club and, even more astonishingly, another 20 million households producing half a terabyte (one thousand gigabytes) each month.
Andrew Keen
Andrew Keen   5/27/2011   18 comments
On the personal invitation of French President Nicolas Sarkozy, I had the great honor of spending the first half of this week in Paris attending the e-G8, an event that brought together many of the leading Internet experts from around the world. The e-G8’s goal was to give the leaders of the world’s G8 powers, now meeting in Deauville, advice about the most effective policies for strengthening the Internet economy and ensuring universal access to the global network.
Andrew Keen
Andrew Keen   4/1/2010   30 comments
What becomes of journalists in our disruptive age of disintermediation, where technology is undermining the very viability of our industrial knowledge working class? Read on.
Andrew Keen
Andrew Keen   3/18/2010   18 comments
Decision, decisions: What do I fancy for lunch today? Do I want a girlfriend? What should I do with my life? Too many questions and not enough time for me to resolve them. So what if there were a Website that knew me well enough to automatically answer all my questions? Wouldn’t that be the next big Internet thing, the definitive answer to all our questions?
Andrew Keen
Andrew Keen   2/22/2010   21 comments
If, as Marshall McLuhan so famously said, the medium is the message, then what does the viral success of Chatroulette, the hot new video social network, tell us about the state of the contemporary Internet?
5
of
IETV: the thinkerNet on film
5
of
an IBM information resource
sponsored content
big blue blog
Todd Watson
This just in from TechNet, a bipartisan policy and political network of technology CEOs that promotes the growth of the innovation economy.
white papers & case studies
an IBM information resource
sponsored content
Social Business: A New World of Opportunity
Social networking has become part of the fabric of everyday life, changing the way people and communities connect, interact, and share information. By applying new modes of networking, collaboration, and mobility to core business processes, enterprises have opportunities to realize value that wasn’t accessible or available before.

READ THIS eBOOK
your weekly update of news, analysis, and
opinion from Internet Evolution - FREE!

REGISTER HERE
Wanted! Site Moderators
Internet Evolution is looking for a handful of readers to help moderate the message boards on our site – as well as engaging in high-IQ conversation with the industry mavens on our thinkerNet blogosphere. The job comes with various perks, bags of kudos, and GIANT bragging rights. Interested?

Please email: moderators@internetevolution.com
Internet Evolution – not for thickies
Foxconn Won't Put Users Off Apple – & Maybe It Shouldn't
Joe Stanganelli
The New York Times recently highlighted the
working conditions in Chinese plants that manufacture iPhones. To privileged Westerners living the high life of the First World, the accounts are not pretty.

CLICK FOR MORE
Clouds Aren't Just for Outsourcing
Mary E. Shacklett
Organizations are gaining experience and confidence with cloud-based solutions. But are they getting the most out of their cloud investments? “Two or three years ago, we were hearing about data safety and overall control concerns, and companies were in the process of still determining what the cost benefits of cloud would be,” said Vijay Takanti, VP of security and collaboration solutions at
Exostar , an aerospace industry cloud services provider. “Now there is a much higher knowledge level in the cloud, and most of these initial concerns, with the exception of security, have been resolved -- but there are still business processes that organizations are hesitant to put into the cloud. They are also not leveraging cloud to get the most out of the technology.”

CLICK FOR MORE
Timeline Means (Social) Business
Joanne Korman Goldman
Are you skittish about using Facebook’s Timeline because your yearbook picture was
inappropriate or growing up you looked like Urkel on Family Matters? Before you dismiss the new format, consider other ways to use Timeline, besides posting your past. In particular, you may find it helps your organization or group to implement social business objectives.

CLICK FOR MORE
what.the.ferraro
Twitter Conferences & the Demise of Humanity

10|13|09   |   1:56   |   6 comments


The rise of industry events centered solely on the topic of Twitter is enough to make some people cry. Literally.
what.the.ferraro
Ashton Tweets No More

11|11|11   |   03:01   |   19 comments


After making an egregious blunder on Twitter, Ashton Kutcher is handing off the task of being informed and sensible to a management team.
what.the.ferraro
Interpretive Recitations of Reactions to New Facebook

9|22|11   |   02:49   |   23 comments


Based on reactions in Nicole's Newsfeed, everyone hates this version of Facebook. This should matter to Facebook now that there's a real competitor on the scene named Google+.
Kim Davis
Facebook as Media Platform? Sigh

9|20|11   |   3:07   |   8 comments


Allowing users to share music and video on Facebook might sound like good news, but is this part of a coherent strategy, or is Facebook just stumbling from idea to idea?
Eben Moglen
The Real Meaning of 'Internet Freedom'

6|14|11   |   2:32   |   7 comments


The US boasts a commitment to "Internet freedom," but in practice that commitment falls short. What Internet freedom really means is freedom of the mind.
what.the.ferraro
Biz Stone Joins AOL as Social Whatever

3|17|11   |   2:27   |   6 comments


Biz Stone is getting paid to be a "social impact strategic advisor" at AOL. We have no idea why.
Wisdom of the Big Chair
The Internet Rocked in 2010!

2|2|11   |   02:05   |   2 comments


A decade after the dotcom boom, the Internet continues to dramatically change the way that business gets done and individuals communicate. More than a trillion email messages traveled over the Net last year, and dramatic changes loom on the horizon.
Mary E. Shacklett
New Media Bring Up Old Questions

11|15|10   |   1:16   |   6 comments


As organizations use more social media, business users are clamoring for access, and we’re faced with an age-old question: Who should set policies on access and content?
Second Shooter
MySpace ‘Reinvention’ Comes Too Late

10|29|10   |   2:09   |   7 comments


MySpace is reinventing itself by focusing on content, but it's too late, and other social networks should learn from its example by looking toward a telco payment model if they want to sustain user commitment and their own revenue.
Thus Spake Mr. Cramer
That's Advertainment!

8|13|10   |   4:15   |   7 comments


Marketers want to sell you stuff, and they need your help. It's crazy, it's crass, it's fun for the whole family! It's the art form of the new millennium!
Kim Davis
Facebook's European Nightmare

2|10|12   |   2:12   |   No comments


Max Schrems, an Austrian law student, has been hauling Facebook over the coals for its data protection practices.
Wisdom of the Big Chair
Where's That Video Clip!?

2|9|12   |   2:15   |   1 comment


Corporations have been gradually creating more video content, but in many cases they lack the tools to easily find that video information later. Companies like Meditrxstream and VMIX have been delivering products to help with that process.
Mary E. Shacklett
New Jobs Meet Rich IT Talent Pool

2|8|12   |   2:12   |   5 comments


Internet-enabled learning (online schools) and certifications have combined to produce rich IT talent pools just as the jobs market is starting to accelerate. Win-win!
what.the.ferraro
Goodbye, TwitterPeek!

2|7|12   |   3:28   |   9 comments


As it turns out, Nicole wasn't alone in thinking that TwitterPeek – the $300 single-purpose device just for Tweeting – was the most useless device to ever be released.
Sweeney Blog
YouTube Activity Does Not Equal Profit

2|6|12   |   2:47   |   18 comments


With 800 million unique visitors, 3 billion daily clicks, 48 hours of uploaded video every minute, YouTube has to be profitable, right? Not so fast.
Kim Davis
Neil Young Flies a Pirate Flag

2|3|12   |   2:56   |   14 comments


Neil Young has been flying the flag for music piracy, but he says there's a role for the music labels too. Everybody wins!
Wisdom of the Big Chair
Feds Provide Solution to Android's Security Problems

2|2|12   |   2:24   |   6 comments


Malware designed to infect Google Android smartphones has increased dramatically, and now the government is stepping in. The National Security Agency has developed SE Android, a system that tries to close up its security holes.
Mary E. Shacklett
DR Should Include User Empowerment

2|1|12   |   2:59   |   6 comments


Disaster recovery is about restoring service to users, but when restoration times are protracted, companies should empower users so they have maximum flexibility for dealing with their situations.
what.the.ferraro
Google+ Age Minimum Makes No Difference

1|31|12   |   2:29   |   18 comments


If you're worried sick about 13-year-olds now being allowed on Google+… don't be. Here's why.
Reiter's Block
Twitter Caves to Censors but Isn't the Enemy

1|30|12   |   2:49   |   13 comments


The Internet erupted in rage when Twitter said it could block tweets on a country-by-country basis. But avoid knee jerk reactions!

Enabling People and Organizations to Harness the Transformative Power of Technology