Philosophy Mondays: Human-AI Collaboration
Today's Philosophy Monday is an important interlude. I want to reveal that I have not been writing the posts in this series entirely by myself. Instead I have been working with Claude, not just for the graphic illustrations, but also for the text. My method has been to write a rough draft and then ask Claude for improvement suggestions. I will expand this collaboration to other intelligences going forward, including open source models such as Llama and DeepSeek. I will also explore other moda...

Intent-based Collaboration Environments
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Web3/Crypto: Why Bother?
One thing that keeps surprising me is how quite a few people see absolutely nothing redeeming in web3 (née crypto). Maybe this is their genuine belief. Maybe it is a reaction to the extreme boosterism of some proponents who present web3 as bringing about a libertarian nirvana. From early on I have tried to provide a more rounded perspective, pointing to both the good and the bad that can come from it as in my talks at the Blockstack Summits. Today, however, I want to attempt to provide a coge...
Philosophy Mondays: Human-AI Collaboration
Today's Philosophy Monday is an important interlude. I want to reveal that I have not been writing the posts in this series entirely by myself. Instead I have been working with Claude, not just for the graphic illustrations, but also for the text. My method has been to write a rough draft and then ask Claude for improvement suggestions. I will expand this collaboration to other intelligences going forward, including open source models such as Llama and DeepSeek. I will also explore other moda...

Intent-based Collaboration Environments
AI Native IDEs for Code, Engineering, Science
Web3/Crypto: Why Bother?
One thing that keeps surprising me is how quite a few people see absolutely nothing redeeming in web3 (née crypto). Maybe this is their genuine belief. Maybe it is a reaction to the extreme boosterism of some proponents who present web3 as bringing about a libertarian nirvana. From early on I have tried to provide a more rounded perspective, pointing to both the good and the bad that can come from it as in my talks at the Blockstack Summits. Today, however, I want to attempt to provide a coge...
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Last July I had predicted that Google would go all in by bundling Google+ aggressively with search and that is exactly what was just announced yesterday with Search, plus Your World. The “plus Your World” part right now refers “your world on Google” as only Google+ profiles, posts and shared images are included and not content from Twitter, Facebook or others. John Batelle’s capture this well in his aptly titled “Search, Plus Your World, As Long As It’s Our World.”
Also worth reading are Danny Sullivan’s excellent overview of what Search+ offers and his detailed analysis of whether or not Google could already include some Twitter content without a commercial arrangement with Twitter. Danny’s analysis has actual comments from an interview with Eric Schmidt. Finally, the most scathing reaction has come from MG Siegler who flat out titles his piece “Antitrust+.”
While it’s too early to know how all of this will play itself out over time (there has already been some public back and forth between Google and Twitter), two things seem fairly clear. First, in the near term this will be bad for end users. Second, the root of the problem are Google’s economics for search. The two point are intimately related.
On the first point, John Perry Barlow aptly tweeted:
We are becoming helpless collateral casualties in the war between Google and Facebook. bit.ly/WorldWarIII
— John Perry Barlow (@JPBarlow) January 10, 2012
From an enduser perspective the best web is one of little pieces loosely joined. That kind of web allows for lots of innovation and individuality. Instead, we are currently headed for big chunks of experience provided by just a couple of players. While a high degree of integration may look appealing to some under an “ease-of-use” type argument, all you have to do is look at the enterprise where a few large vendors have dominated for years (SAP, Oracle) to know how undesirable that is.
On the second point. the root cause of all of this are search economics. Google keeps one hundred percent of the search revenue from searches on Google. The explicit quid pro quo has always been that Google sends traffic to a site in return for getting to include the content among the search results. No search revenue is shared with the sources. During days when Google was just a search engine that seemed like a reasonable quid pro quo. But two things have happened to make this balance not work. First, Google has gradually entered many businesses that compete directly with providers of content and second we have seen the emergence and inclusion of many content “micro chunks” that will hardly ever generate traffic to the originating site, such as a restaurant rating from Yelp. I have argued before that some kind of revenue sharing will be required to break through this.
When Larry Page became Google’s CEO I had hoped that he would maybe pursue a vision of the web of little pieces loosely joined with Google providing a lot of that glue. It is by now amply clear that Google is going exactly in the opposite direction. That’s a shame in the near term. In the long run I agree with John Batelle that the web will find a way to route around all of this (assuming we don’t let the politicians screw it up in the meantime).
Last July I had predicted that Google would go all in by bundling Google+ aggressively with search and that is exactly what was just announced yesterday with Search, plus Your World. The “plus Your World” part right now refers “your world on Google” as only Google+ profiles, posts and shared images are included and not content from Twitter, Facebook or others. John Batelle’s capture this well in his aptly titled “Search, Plus Your World, As Long As It’s Our World.”
Also worth reading are Danny Sullivan’s excellent overview of what Search+ offers and his detailed analysis of whether or not Google could already include some Twitter content without a commercial arrangement with Twitter. Danny’s analysis has actual comments from an interview with Eric Schmidt. Finally, the most scathing reaction has come from MG Siegler who flat out titles his piece “Antitrust+.”
While it’s too early to know how all of this will play itself out over time (there has already been some public back and forth between Google and Twitter), two things seem fairly clear. First, in the near term this will be bad for end users. Second, the root of the problem are Google’s economics for search. The two point are intimately related.
On the first point, John Perry Barlow aptly tweeted:
We are becoming helpless collateral casualties in the war between Google and Facebook. bit.ly/WorldWarIII
— John Perry Barlow (@JPBarlow) January 10, 2012
From an enduser perspective the best web is one of little pieces loosely joined. That kind of web allows for lots of innovation and individuality. Instead, we are currently headed for big chunks of experience provided by just a couple of players. While a high degree of integration may look appealing to some under an “ease-of-use” type argument, all you have to do is look at the enterprise where a few large vendors have dominated for years (SAP, Oracle) to know how undesirable that is.
On the second point. the root cause of all of this are search economics. Google keeps one hundred percent of the search revenue from searches on Google. The explicit quid pro quo has always been that Google sends traffic to a site in return for getting to include the content among the search results. No search revenue is shared with the sources. During days when Google was just a search engine that seemed like a reasonable quid pro quo. But two things have happened to make this balance not work. First, Google has gradually entered many businesses that compete directly with providers of content and second we have seen the emergence and inclusion of many content “micro chunks” that will hardly ever generate traffic to the originating site, such as a restaurant rating from Yelp. I have argued before that some kind of revenue sharing will be required to break through this.
When Larry Page became Google’s CEO I had hoped that he would maybe pursue a vision of the web of little pieces loosely joined with Google providing a lot of that glue. It is by now amply clear that Google is going exactly in the opposite direction. That’s a shame in the near term. In the long run I agree with John Batelle that the web will find a way to route around all of this (assuming we don’t let the politicians screw it up in the meantime).
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