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I believe there are really only two answers, and only one of them is going to help us dig our way out of the hole our species finds itself in:
Whatever the goal may be, tech exists to address a human need (or desire), as all businesses are actually meant to do.
However, tech also bears a responsibility to the human race—and our entire planet—other industries don’t always have.
The reason tech is set to a higher standard of social responsibility is simple: it is the single greatest force in ..For example, we will evolve past the need for the 40 hour work-week, as we’ve evolved past the need for an 80 hour work-week.This is made possible by technology: as productivity increases due to tech, this impacts the fabric of our society.Consider automation, AI, and robots.
As these technologies aim to ‘fire’ humans from mundane, routine, difficult, or inefficient tasks, they cannot exist simply as a vehicle for wealth. There's a social aspect that must be considered.Tech impacts far too much to be left harmless to its machinations.By not cracking-down on the alt-right et al until it was too late, Twitter made its stance very clear: what drives social media engagement is good, regardless of who/what it is.
Twitter is an outrage machine that drastically harms mental health. Twitter's leadership does not care as long as they continue to grow.Think about businesses like Youtube.Youtube is an advertising platform with a dash of whatever it is Twitter is on about.Even though it posits itself as a space for content creators, demonetization can happen at the drop of a hat, and stuffing as many ads as humanly possible into every video is the end-game.Youtube—like Facebook and Twitter—exists to consume data, sell things and data, and leverage human beings interacting, speaking, and making things, in order to do just that.All of these tech businesses may not have started as ways to churn and burn human currency, but they all ended up that way, anyways.The sad reality is that, as capitalism is tied into everything we do—and it has to be as of right now—capitalism ends up being the only end-goal for tech.Especially for Big Tech, who have since (or perhaps always) ignored the social responsibility and ramifications inherent to what they create.Social ramifications like joblessness due to automation, privacy, data security, mass conspiratorial bullshit, and mental health challenges.However, there are still tech businesses that reaffirm their responsibility to humanity, all while straddling the capitalism hell-pit.The way they do this is by passing value checks and making choices.Let’s be clear: these choices all exist and aren't impossible.
These choices are absolutely not erased because money entered the chat.
Make no mistake, people make these decisions. People have the choice between doing the thing that makes more cash, and doing the thing that helps more people (when both can't align easily).
Barring an absolute cash-flow meltdown, where this drastically impacts the humans working in tech spaces, there’s really no excuse for not centering the human-centric option, first.
Furthermore, if it gets to that point, the responsibility of keeping the business going relies completely on the humans who make the high-level decisions in said business.Take, for instance, the Nintendo 3DS’ markdown situation (gaming is technology). The president and board of directors, rather than laying off a huge chunk of their workforce, .This was a decision, made by people, that put people first.Choosing the righteous path may mean leadership takes on more of the workload, or finds creative ways to streamline processes to save money. That's why technology exists. It doesn't have to erase the bottom line's financial mobility, either.This may mean investing in employee training, health, and happiness, in order to prevent the $11 billion dollar a year drain created by employee turnover.This may mean, instead of rapid outwards expansion, that a business takes a more careful, long-term approach to decision making. One that looks to the far future, not just quarterly gains.Tech is not incapable of making people-first choices.
It’s just that so many tech businesses—especially the big guys—choose not to.
It sees an end-goal that would have every single person be a cog in a perpetually dying machine of its own making, that it can, if it chooses to, avoid.
What choice will you make?