cim wrote:Google search I wouldn't consider "disruptive" at all - it's basically just the same search engines that the web had for a good decade before, except that when it first came along it had much more relevant results and was able to use that to get a dominant market position - run by a fairly traditional tech company. (I don't think it's useful to include the sites it links to as part of that "shared investment", as there's no particular shared goal for "all websites" collectively)
I beg to differ.
Google search is the fundation of other google services, first of all Adsense (ads on google and on world websites) which is displacing all other ads-funded industries.
Adsense is disruptive: 1) "customers pay depending on the number of ads clicked, and not the number of ads viewed", 2) "with the bids system, the prices are fixed through a real market concurrency", 3) "Ads may be everywhere in the world, and primarily on THE internet remote control used by everyone", 4) "the quality of the targeting system for these ads is the best in the advertisement industry". 3 insures the world best coverage, 4 insures the best quality in clickers, 1 insures real interest of the target, and 2 insures the lowest price achievable in the industry (note that this method of price fixing doesn't take into account the cost of publishing the ads; it's only based on what people are willing to pay).
This means that to propose a better deal, you have to propose the same pricing method, with a better coverage (totally impossible), or a better customer targeting quality (currently impossible, Google is the best for this with Google search, and they are working on every current research on data veracity).
Digression: android is essential to their strategy as it brings them true data, which is necessary to have the best ads. The Internet of things too.
So... Adsense is where they earn money, and other ads industries are feeling the pain. (TV channels in France, at least, papers, etc.)
Now, about the "shared investment" part. Google brings value to its users, be it through ads or relevant search results. This value is clearly greater than the one proposed by the market before, as they reached very quickly an almost total domination of the market in these two sectors, are continuing to expand, and are not even tickled by their concurrents.
From where does come the invested value in the technical tool providing this value to users ?
1)(no sense of order) From the r&d made by Google (algorithms, etc), 2) from the material infrastructure provided by google (lots of servers smartly spread over the world), 3) from the "free" technology they integrated (like linux), which is really shared investment itself, 4) from the data they gathered from their users.
This part is essential, and is shared property rights, ie shared investment.
cim wrote:Wikipedia [...] gives a good example - in terms of its social dynamics, in terms of what articles get effort put into them, and so on - of just how unrepresentative "people who are willing and able to work on that sort of thing for free" are of the general population [1,2], and how difficult it is to manage shared investment and collaboration towards productive effort rather than shouting at each other when the overall goal is very vague.
Well yes, this explains why shared investment companies like google exist with not-shared shareholders.
cim wrote:The other two are transparent ways to cheat (possibly legally; there are too many court cases in progress and pending in too many jurisdictions to be sure one way or another on that) around various licensing and workers' rights laws to run a conventional-ish company without things such as fair salaries, equipment expenses, insurance costs, regulatory compliance and so on cutting into profits. That seems to be the Silicon Valley definition of "disruptive", but it seems to be just more of the same to me.
I beg to differ here too
For a car or flat owner, the Total Cost of Ownership might be strongly lowered if they're renting their goods when not using them. Airbnb and Uber allow that.
For a Airbnb or Uber user, this is a way to improve the concurrency, lowering the price, maybe avoiding to own a car or a flat, so lowering drastically his own TCO.
From an infrastructure point of view, if the prices are significantly displaced, then some new business will appear on top of this "new" infrastructure, this is good for society.
So, this is disruptive and good for the society.
Now, about regulatory requirements, these were put into place to protect customers and providers in a "hotel/taxi" way of doing things. We must now find ways to protect customers and providers in a digital context (maybe with digital solutions!). Concerning fair salaries and costs, well... In USA and generally in capitalist societies, the idea is that you have to find goods or services that other want to buy at a price to sell it to them; nobody said anybody had to buy from you. So, "fair salaries" were mostly put in place to protect employees from bosses in position of power, the thing often overseen is the salary is a negociation internal to the company, not external as in the price paid by the customer to the company.
To summary, improving the productivity and lowering the TCO of goods all over the country(ies) is very good for the society (if not always the economy).