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Can Marc Andreessen Stop Technology From Eating Our Jobs?
Sunday March 31, 2019. 12:34 PM , from Slashdot
Technology writer Tom Chanter explores the life story of venture capitalist Marc Andreessen to ask whether software will not only eat the world, but also the jobs of what one historian predicts will be a 'massive new unworking class: people devoid of any economic, political or even artistic value.' Can Marc Andreessen prevent a so-called 'useless class' who 'will not merely be unemployed -- it will be unemployable'?
Andreessen grew up in New Lisbon, Wisconsin (population: 1,500), and taught himself the BASIC programming language at age 8. He co-developed the original Mosaic web browser before he'd graduated from college, went on to co-found Netscape, and by age 23 was worth $53 million. He then transformed into a 'super angel' investor in companies like Twitter, Airbnb, Lyft, Facebook, Skype, and GitHub. 'Having been an innovator in the tech start-up game, Andreessen is now an innovator in the tech venture capital game,' writes Chanter. 'He is a jedi that has become the master.' In 2011, Marc Andreessen published an article in the Wall Street Journal titled, Why Software Is Eating The World. He wrote, 'Over the next 10 years, the battles between incumbents and software-powered insurgents will be epic....' 7 years later, it's clear Andreessen was correct. Lyft has destroyed taxi jobs. Airbnb has destroyed hotel jobs. Amazon destroyed independent bookstores. How does Andreessen feel about that? 'Screw the independent bookstores,' he said in his New Yorker profile. 'There weren't any near where I grew up. There were only ones in college towns. The rest of us could go pound sand.' But the 4,900-word article also notes Andreessen's pledge to give half his income to charitable causes -- and his observation in a 2015 interview that outside of the United States, global income inequality is falling, not rising. 'He has seen technology transform his own life, and has seen how technology has bridged the global wealth gap. Why shouldn't he be optimistic about the future of America's working class?' And Andreessen's ultimate answer to the jobs destroyed by technology may be Udacity. The article cites Andreessen's investment in the company in 2012, and points to the online education platform's hopeful mission statement. 'Virtually anyone on the planet with an internet connection and a commitment to self-empowerment through learning can come to Udacity, master a suite of job-ready skills, and pursue rewarding employment.' As a boy in Wisconsin he was starved for information. He has created an education institution accessible from Wisconsin to Africa. As a boy in Wisconsin he was starved for connection. He has married an innovative philanthropist and author, Laura Arrillaga-Andreessen. They have a son named John. Andreessen is optimistic for both the working class and the future tech elite. In his New Yorker profile he says of his son, 'He'll come of age in a world where ten or a hundred times more people will be able to contribute in science and medicine and the arts, a more peaceful and prosperous world.' He added, tongue in cheek, 'I'm going to teach him how to take over that world!' Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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