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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Reciprocal Benefits in the Quest for Dominance. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Reciprocal Benefits in the Quest for Dominance
by noteworthy at 7:29 am EST, Nov 17, 2010

Tim Wu:

I write about business in the way that writers have traditionally written about war. I'm interested in the quest for dominance, in industrial warfare. I believe that capitalism, by its nature, is about conflict, and ultimately the life and death of firms.

David Axelrod:

We have to deal with the world as we find it.

Paul Krugman:

The main reason Mr. Obama finds himself in this situation is that two years ago he was not, in fact, prepared to deal with the world as he was going to find it. And it seems as if he still isn't.

James Surowiecki:

Opposing the new [health care] law while reaping the benefits of Medicare is essentially saying, "I've got mine -- good luck getting yours."

Joe Nocera:

They just want theirs. That is the culture they have created.

Dave Winer:

Everyone has a scam. This year the scam is to grab all the user's data and resell it.

Eric Schmidt:

You get a billion people doing something, there's lots of ways to make money. Absolutely, trust me. We'll get lots of money for it.

Paul Buchheit:

When you are at some place as successful as Google, you start to think you do everything right.

Jay Rosen:

Ninety percent of everything is crap, but that's nothing novel. There's just more everything now.

Paul Buchheit:

One of the downsides of having worked on something like [Gmail] that was notable is that everyone keeps expecting that you are going to work on that again.

Merlin Mann:

It takes a lot of patience and it takes a lot of self-awareness to be open to the fact that you may become popular about something that you didn't want to become popular about.

At a certain point, you don't get to pick that anymore.

Tim Wu:

The government has conferred its blessing on monopolies in information industries with unusual frequency. Sometimes this protection has yielded reciprocal benefits, with the owner of an information network offering the state something valuable in return, like warrantless wiretaps.

Decius:

Money for me, databases for you.


 
RE: Reciprocal Benefits in the Quest for Dominance
by ubernoir at 8:45 pm EST, Nov 17, 2010

noteworthy wrote:
Tim Wu:

I write about business in the way that writers have traditionally written about war. I'm interested in the quest for dominance, in industrial warfare. I believe that capitalism, by its nature, is about conflict, and ultimately the life and death of firms.

that is such colossal bullshit
having just watched "The Hurt Locker" to compare "the life and death of firms" to the loss of real human lives and the momentous struggle between value systems and cultures where nature of civilization can be at stake is to have lost perspective. Money is not that important. The life and death of a firm. Really ... or hyperbole alert.

yes a company can embody a set of values and has a culture so parallels can be drawn (it is the propagation of memes) but to exaggerate the importance of the one is to insult the memory of the fallen and very real sacrifices made selflessly, where going home is the only reward for victory to the individual, thus my emotional response to something I consider frankly distasteful


 
 
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