Michael J. Casey is the chairman of CoinDeskâs advisory board and a senior advisor for blockchain research at MITâs Digital Currency Initiative.
The following article originally appeared in CoinDesk Weekly, a custom-curated newsletter delivered every Sunday exclusively to our subscribers.
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Donât look now, but thereâs an elephant in the room. Scratch that. Itâs an entire herd of elephants.
While Crypto Twitter bickers and fights, leaving competing coin projects and blockchain startups to defend each othersâ counter-allegations of centralizing misdeeds, the real centralizing power-mongers of our digital economy have been pillaging our data and reshaping humanity into an instrument of their domination.
Thatâs the alarming, bold conclusion of âThe Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power,â the recently released mega-tome by Harvard Business School professor Shoshana Zuboff.
My prediction: this book, which eviscerates the âapplied utopianismâ and âtechnological inevitablismâ of data-gobbling Silicon Valley titans such as Google and Facebook, will become a defining text of our age. Read it. It is of vital importance.
I especially think itâs critical reading for the crypto community, where people will feel both vindicated and challenged by Zuboffâs thesis.
If blockchain technology is to play an integral role in the evolution of the digital global economy and be a force for good, rather than a vehicle of computerized subjugation, its advocates will have to contend with the angry backlash against digital technologies that this book will help fuel.
How, truly, is blockchain any better than GAFA (Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple)? How do we ensure that it doesnât fall for the same pattern of what Zuboff calls âbehavioral surplus extraction?â A general public thatâs increasingly anxious about their invaded privacy and lost personal agency deserves such questions answered.
Itâs hard to pigeonhole this writer. Zuboffâs instincts are liberal, and she takes a very hard view of raw market power. But her defiant support of the right to individual free will â framed in her elegant phrasing as the right to âsanctuaryâ and to âthe future tenseâ â dovetails nicely with the views of many pro-privacy advocates in the blockchain community.
The lines between left and right have been blurred for some time. While Zuboffâs no fan of unfettered market capitalism and doesnât think much of Friedrich Hayek, the Austrian economist whoâs a darling of many bitcoin fans, thereâs much that lines up here with the crypto worldâs cypherpunk vision of freedom.
To be sure, the solutions are different. A blockchain solution for breaking down surveillance capitalism would naturally be a technological one, embracing the power of math and cryptography to design a new digital topography of trust that disempowers the centralized middleman and creates human agency within a decentralized system.
Zuboff, by contrast, is suspicious of the absolutism of math-based solutions, and focuses instead on the levers of government. And, since sheâs very concerned with the complicity of Western governments in encouraging the current model, she first insists on restoring real democracy to change the system from outside the digital realm.
Her most important contribution to our reckoning with this problem is to craft a language with which to describe what has happened to society in the past two decades. Zuboffâs task is to get us beyond the pre-existing frames of reference that constrain our ability to define the unprecedented â as when people at the start of the last century described cars as âhorseless carriages.â
Introducing new words and concepts such as âsurveillance capitalism,â âinstrumentarianism,â âBig Otherâ and, my favorite, âsurveillance-as-a-service,â or SvAAS, she gives people a taxonomy for describing the previously indescribable.
That, in itself, will have powerful ramifications, as it will enable the counterattack from citizens, businesses and governments feeling dislocated by the social dysfunction that shows up in our politics, economic divisions and crumbling bonds of trust.
âIf democracy is to be replenished,â Zuboff writes, âit is up to us to rekindle the sense of outrage and loss over what has been taken from us.â
I personally found many of Zuboffâs anti-technology positions too extreme. Whereas she sees the concept of âhive mindsâ as dehumanizing, reducing individuals to automatons, I think itâs possible to envisage an information technology-enriched world in which truly autonomous, free-thinking humans more easily come together and collaboratively innovate. The open-source inventiveness of global blockchain development communities speaks directly to this.
But where people like Zuboff matter is that, right or wrong, their words stir discourse and debate. Like it or not, this is going to be a talking point for all of us.
So, if blockchain technology is to be relevant, if its advocates are to rise above the false but, sadly, prevailing mainstream view of them as scam artists and lambo-loving day traders, they will need to insert themselves into the debate.
Some will rightly see an opportunity here for pro-privacy developers. Those building zero-knowledge-proof systems and other privacy-protection layers can talk to a vision of decentralized protocols that both empower individuals to control their own data and prevent the public ledger from becoming a new behavior extraction tool. Thatâs one potential answer to surveillance capitalism.
But itâs also important that crypto-savvy businessmen, lawyers, policymakers, academics and journalists are part of this conversation.
How can we ensure that the right regulations, standards, and best-practice norms are installed such that the technology develops on a much healthier trajectory than that with which the current Internet economy has evolved?
Letâs keep our eyes on that ball.
Surveillance camera image via Shutterstock.