My talk to the joint OECD/G20 German Presidency conference on digitalization in Berlin on January 12, 2017. Fitness landscapes as applied to technology, business, and the economy. Note that the fitness landscape slides will not be animated in this PDF, which I shared this way so that you could see my narrative in the speaker notes. While it has some slides in common with my White House Frontiers conference talk, it includes a bunch of other material.
2. “…47 percent of jobs are “at risk”
of being automated in the next 20
years.”
Carl Frey and Michael Osborne, Oxford University
“The Future of Employment: How Susceptible
Are Jobs to Computerisation?”
They read that researchers at Oxford University project that up to 47% of human tasks, including many white collar jobs, could be eliminated by automation within the next 20 years.
4. Will there really be nothing left for people to do?
Is there really
nothing left for
humans to do?
They’ve seen calls for Universal Basic Income, with the assumption that there will be nothing left for humans to do once corporations outsource all the work to machines. While I think Universal Basic Income is an intriguing idea, I
don’t think we need it because there will be nothing left for humans to do. There’s plenty to do. The problem is that
5. Our global economy has the
mistaken idea that the goal of
technology is to maximize
productivity, even if that means
treating people as a cost to be
eliminated.
Our economy has the mistaken idea that the goal of technology is to maximize productivity, even if that means treating people as a cost to be eliminated.
6. That’s a problem
“The people will rise up before
the robots do.”
Andy Macafee
Co-author, The Second
Machine Age
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andy Macafee
Even leaving aside the obvious problem of injustice and inequality, this is the stuff of revolutions. Andy Macafee, the author, with Erik Brynjolfsson, of the Second Machine Age, once said to me, talking of the fear that robots will
take over, “The people will rise up before the robots do.”
7. We’ve seen this happen before
We’ve seen this happen before. In England, back in 1811 and 1812, a group of weavers led by Ned Ludd staged a rebellion, smashing the steam powered looms that were threatening their livelihood. Ludd and his compatriots
were right to be afraid. The decades ahead were grim, as machines replaced human labor, and it took time for society to adjust.
11. It isn’t technology that wants to eliminate jobs
“Technology is the solution to
human problems. We won’t
run out of work till we run
out of problems.”
Nick Hanauer
It isn’t technology that wants to eliminate jobs. Here’s what technology really wants. Nick Hanauer, who was one of the speakers at my Next:Economy Summit last year, put it best when he said: “Technology is the solution to
human problems. We won’t run out of work till we run out of problems.” Are we done yet? Are we done yet?
12. Some global grand challenges
technology can help us to solve
• Climate change.
• Rebuilding and rethinking the infrastructure by which we deliver water,
power, goods, and services like healthcare.
• Dealing with the “demographic inversion” — the lengthening lifespans
of the old and the smaller number of young workers to pay into the
social systems that support them.
• Income inequality.
• Displaced people. How could we use technology to create the
infrastructure for whole new cities, factories, and farms, so people
could be settlers, not refugees?
Some global grand challenges technology can help us to solve
- Climate change.
- Rebuilding and rethinking the infrastructure by which we deliver water, power, goods, and services like healthcare.
- Dealing with the “demographic inversion” — the lengthening lifespans of the old and the smaller number of young workers to pay into the social systems that support them.
- Income inequality. “The people will rise up before the robots do.”
- Displaced people. How could we use technology to create the infrastructure for whole new cities, factories, and farms, so people could be settlers, not refugees?
13. The use of automation by business to reduce labor costs and increase
profits is a social and political choice, not an economic law!
It’s not new technology we should be afraid of. It’s the dominant ideology that says that people don’t matter, that the need for business to maximize profits is as natural as the law of gravity. The use of automation by business to
reduce labor costs and increase profits is a social and political choice, not an economic law! I made this case in an article I wrote last year on LinkedIn, arguing that the rules of economics that we take for granted are more like the
rules of a game than the laws of physics. The rules could be optimized to make the game better. That is your challenge.
14. The March of Progress
If you’re like me, you’ve gotten accustomed to seeing charts like this, from Max Roser’s Our World in Data, documenting the march of progress during the 20
th
century. We’ve congratulated ourselves repeatedly for the seemingly
inevitable continuation of that progress, despite bumps in the road. In Silicon Valley, people are so optimistic that they imagine that progress will become exponential.
15. But not everyone is equally happy
But as Brexit and the election of Donald Trump tell us, there are a large number of people who don’t think the economy of the future will be better for them.
16. Fitness Landscapes
The way in which genes contribute
to the survival of an organism can
be viewed as a landscape of peaks
and valleys.
Through a series of experiments,
organisms evolve towards fitness
peaks, adapted to a particular
environment, or they die out.
Image source: http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/side_0_0/complexnovelties_02
Recent events in world politics, as well as the history in the technology industry as I’ve lived it for the past thirty years, remind me that the notion from evolutionary biology, of a fitness landscape, is perhaps a better metaphor for
how the future unfolds than the graph that goes always up and to the right.
A fitness landscape is a way of visualizing how genes contribute to the survival of an organism and a species. External conditions can be viewed as a landscape of peaks and valleys. Through a series of experiments, organisms
evolve towards fitness peaks, adapted to a particular environment, or they die out.
17. Fitness landscapes are dynamic
When conditions are stable, a
population chooses one fitness
peak and stays there.
But when conditions change
rapidly, populations must migrate
to a new fitness peak.
When conditions are stable, a population chooses one fitness peak and stays there.
But when conditions change rapidly, populations must migrate to a new fitness peak. That’s what Brexit and Donald Trump voters are trying to do.
18. Local Maxima
Once you are on a peak, it’s
hard to get to another one,
even if it’s higher. You have to
go back down. It may be
easier to get to the top if you
are already starting from a
valley floor.
One of the really interesting ideas is that there are local maxima in a fitness landscape – peaks of adaptive success – that organisms are evolving towards. But they key point is that you can’t easily get from one peak to another.
You have to go down before you can go up again. It may be easier to get to the top if you are already starting from a valley floor.
19. Technology also has a fitness landscape
In my career, I’ve watched
a number of migrations to
new peaks, and I’d like to
share with you some
observations about what
happened, and why. And
then we’ll talk about some
lessons for digitalization of
the overall economy.
Personal
Computer
Big Data
and
AI
Smartphones
Apple
So why am I telling you this? Technology and business also has a fitness landscape, and one that changes very rapidly. In my career, I’ve watched a number of migrations to new peaks, and I’d like to share with you some
observations about what happened, and why. And then we’ll talk about some lessons for digitalization of the overall economy.
When a new wave of technology hits, a new company almost always becomes dominant. The dominant company of one technology wave sometimes manages to survive, but it loses its privileged position as the technology
marketplace migrates to a new peak. The path to the top of each new peak requires new competencies – a new fitness function – and the old competency actually holds back the previously dominant company.
20. Big Data
and
AI
Tim Berners-Lee, 1990
The World Wide Web
Linus Torvalds, 1991
Linux
One of the things that I’ve learned is that the surest way to drive entrepreneurs to seek the fitness peak of a new technology and a new business model is for dominant players to take too much of the value for themselves. And
just as in biology, it’s easier to get to the new peak from the valley. I watched this happen with Microsoft in the 1990s. The company had used its dominance over the operating system to lock out competitors. But the innovators
just went elsewhere, where there was an opportunity for open innovation, and invented the future on the way up a new fitness peak. Tim Berners-Lee introduced the World Wide Web in 1990, and Linus Torvalds introduced Linux
in 1991. Between the two of them, the paradigm changed. Software was now a commodity. Big data was the new source of competitive advantage, with Google at the latest peak in the fitness landscape.
Net lesson: You lose when you try to capture too much of the value for yourself. And you lose again if you hang on to the old rules of business when faced with the resulting change in the fitness landscape.
22. What is the result?
Voters are moving away from the
fitness peak of the neoliberal
consensus. We don’t know yet
where that new fitness peak will
be, but the migration is telling us
loud and clear that the economy
needs some fresh thinking.
Voters are moving away from the fitness peak of the neoliberal consensus. We don’t know yet where that new fitness peak will be, but the migration is telling us loud and clear that the economy needs some fresh thinking.
23. Yes, things are changing.
But one thing doesn’t change.
A successful ecosystem creates
opportunity for everyone, not just
a few.
Yes, things are changing. But one thing doesn’t change. A successful ecosystem creates opportunity for everyone, not just a few.
The fundamental fitness function of government is to make a better life for all its citizens. A group such as the G20 must take as its scope a better life for all citizens of the world. What I’ve learned from watching successions of
technology leadership is that companies lose that leadership when they forget this.
24. We will create the economy of the
future when we remember that the
function of technology is to empower
people to do things that were
previously impossible!
We will create the economy of the future when we remember that the function of technology is to empower people to do things that were previously impossible!
25. Government statistics, economic modeling, and
regulations are too slow for the pace and scale of
the modern world
“Would you cross the street with
information that was five seconds old?”
-
Jeff Jonas,
IBM Fellow
The greater speed and scale of the systems we use today make a compelling argument that the tools government relies on to manage the economy are far, far too slow. As former IBM fellow Jeff Jonas noted, “Would you cross
the street with information that was five seconds old?” Yet government statistics for managing the economy are usually years old, while hedge funds and other financial players are no longer forecasting, but, as Google chief
economist Hal Varian calls it, “nowcasting.”
27. Users post 7 billion pieces of
content to Facebook a day.
Expecting human fact checkers to
catch fake news is like asking
workers to build a modern city
with only picks and shovels.
At internet scale, we now rely
increasingly on algorithms to
manage what we see and believe.
Fake news also teaches us a lot about how regulatory systems need to change. There have been many calls for Facebook to use human fact checkers to eliminate fake news. Users post 7 billion pieces of content to Facebook a day,
and most stories that go viral do so in a matter of hours. Expecting human fact checkers to catch fake news is like asking workers with picks and shovels to build a modern city. At internet scale, we now rely increasingly on
algorithms to manage what we see and believe. Those algorithms are the tools of human judgment, not a replacement for it, just like the giant machines we see on the skyline of Berlin are the tools of human effort.
28. This is why Mark Zuckerberg tells his team
“Move fast and break things.”
-
Mark Zuckerberg
One of Mark Zuckerberg’s rules, which he drummed into his staff from the earliest days of Facebook, is to “move fast and break things.” This is completely counterintuitive to those who live in the careful world of politics (though
as Donald Trump has shown us, that is changing.) This is not an injunction to be careless, just a reminder that urgency and innovation beat over-careful planning in a fast moving world. Facebook, Google, Amazon, and other
Silicon Valley success stories are machines for learning.
29. “Build, Measure, Learn.”
Eric Ries,
The Lean Startup
What drives Mark’s injunction is an approach that has been formalized by Eric Ries as “the lean startup.” Eric tells the story of his first startup, which designed and built a complex 3D avatar system for instant messaging. It failed
utterly. In thinking what they could have done differently, Eric realized that they could have saved themselves years of effort and millions of dollars if they had built something much simpler. He defines the “minimum viable
product” as “that version of a new product a team uses to collect the maximum amount of validated learning about customers with the least effort.” A typical Silicon Valley company doesn’t release software after years of
specification and procurement, followed by years of development, only to fail on release, like the US healthcare.gov website. Instead, features are rolled out and tested incrementally in what Eric calls a “Build, Measure, Learn”
cycle. Features are built incrementally, tested on users, and deployed only when they are known to work.
30. Every day, they are inspecting the
performance of their workers and
giving them instruction (in the form of
code) about how to do a better job
In digital systems, the workers are programs,
and software engineers are their managers
Programmers are actually managers. Every day, they are inspecting the performance of their workers and giving them instruction about how to do a better job. The Build-Measure-Learn cycle is the equivalent of a
manager giving feedback to his employees. Except that the employees are now programs. Companies like Google and Amazon run thousands of experiments a day, constantly improving their algorithms and their
product.
31. “This isn’t just how we should be
developing software. It’s how we should be
developing policy.”
Cecilia Muñoz,
Director, White House
Domestic Policy Council
Working with the new United States Digital Service, the White House developed its new college scorecard program using these techniques. As Haley van Dyke, Deputy Director of the USDS told the story, the USDS team that built
the software was raked over the coals for not incorporating features requested by White House staff. They replied that they had tested these features on thousands of students, and none of them used them, so they took them
out of the product. When staffers protested that they wanted their features in the product, Cecilia Muñoz, the Director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, backed up the USDS team, saying “
“This isn’t just how we should be developing software. It’s how we should be developing policy.”
34. “Doing digital is not the same as being
digital.”
Josh Bersin
Deloitte
As you think about digitalization, it’s important to remember that, as Deloitte’s Josh Bersin put it, “Doing digital is not the same thing as being digital.”
35. “We have to go from apps to ops.”
Jennifer Pahlka
Code for America
& USDS
My wife, Jennifer Pahlka, founder and executive director of the nonprofit Code for America, which works to bring government services into the digital age, and who was the co-founder of the United States Digital Service, likes to
say that government has to move “from apps to ops.” In moving to digital, government has too often simply recreated its old paper-based processes rather than reinventing them. It’s essential to rethink services in light of what is
now possible.
37. “The smartphone is becoming a remote
control for real life.”
Matt Cohler,
Benchmark Partners
I said that what Estonia had done was the first generation of digitalization. It’s critical to understand that digitalization is coming to the real world. Matt Cohler, one of Facebook’s earliest employees and now a venture capitalist,
noted one key point about his investment in Uber. He said “the smartphone is becoming a remote control for real life.” This is a key takeaway from on-demand apps. Don’t get all caught up in whether or not being an Uber driver
is better or worse than being a licensed taxi driver. Think about how technology can transform real world processes. We have to reinvent processes, not just duplicate them.
38. “Uber is a lesson in building for how the
world should work instead of optimizing for
how the world does work.”
Aaron Levie, Box.net
I know you aren’t big fans of Uber here in Germany. But it is an application that teaches us something very important about the future. We had connected taxicabs before Uber. They just stuck a credit card reader in the back
along with a television screen to show ads. It took a radical rethinking of the possibilities lying latent in digital technology to realize that a smartphone in the hands of both drivers and passengers meant that it would be possible
to completely change the way transportation was summoned, who provides it, and how payment is collected. What business processes are you simply recreating in the digital era, when you should completely reinvent them?
Aaron Levie, founder of another internet startup, box.net, made this admiring comment about Uber that has always stuck with me. “Uber is a lesson in building for how the world should work instead of optimizing for how the
world does work.”