Sinopsis
Reinvent gathers top innovators in video conversations about how to fundamentally reinvent our world.
Episodios
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Future of Sharing: Optimizing Our WTF Economy for the Long-Term
09/01/2018 Duración: 01h03minTim O’Reilly, founder and CEO of O’Reilly Media, believes we should rethink the world using today’s technology. “Let’s stop optimizing for the short-term. Let’s start optimizing for the long-term, and think about how to make the society we want,” O’Reilly says. O’Reilly acknowledges that technology is destroying jobs today, but only because “we’ve built incentives into our economy to encourage those choices.” O’Reilly believes that an economy not optimized for the short-term would place much less importance on stock performance, and would pay workers more. He refers to the current economy as the WTF economy (also the name of his Medium publication) because he sees WTF as an expression of both wonder and dismay, and in today’s economy, O’Reilly says, we see both.
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Future of Sharing: Improving Platforms, Policies & Partnerships to Fight Discrimination
09/01/2018 Duración: 38minLaura Murphy, the former head of the American Civil Liberties Union’s DC legislative office, recently conducted a 90-day review of discrimination on Airbnb (read the report here). Murphy says that she believes it’s in the enlightened self-interest of not only Airbnb, but all sharing economy companies, to make a sustained effort to serve entire communities, not just an elite market share. All companies, Murphy said, should be prepared for complaints of discrimination. “To have a company stick its head in the sand and say there’s not a problem out there is naive and also dangerous…You don’t know where discrimination is going to manifest itself, because it’s so much a part of our culture in the United States. Given that, you can’t just do one thing and expect it to solve discrimination for all time.”
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Future of Sharing: Houston’s Response to the Sharing Economy’s Regulatory Challenges
09/01/2018 Duración: 21minAnnise Parker, the mayor of Houston, Texas, from 2010 until January 2016, is well-accustomed to navigating the often murky waters of sharing economy regulation. Parker’s first experience with the sharing economy was using Zipcar’s technology to manage Houston’s fleet of light-duty vehicles. Later in her tenure as mayor, Parker worked to create a regulatory level playing field for the taxi industry and ride-sharing apps by lessening regulations on taxis and applying what she viewed as necessary regulations to the apps. “You can’t take a heavily regulated industry and de-regulate it overnight,” Parker said.
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Future or Sharing: Home-Sharing as a Means of Sustainable and Personalized Tourism
09/01/2018 Duración: 36minFrancesco Rutelli, former Mayor of Rome and a member of Airbnb’s Mayoral Advisory Board, wants tourists visiting Italy to take full advantage of the wealth of culture that Italy has to offer. Rutelli believes that Airbnb is part of the answer to the question of how to provide tourists with personalized experiences. Rutelli also views home-sharing as a more sustainable alternative to mass tourism.
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Future of Sharing: Using Technology to Create a New Operating System for Cities
09/01/2018 Duración: 52minStephen Yarwood, the former Lord Mayor of Adelaide, Australia, is a firm believer in our digital future. “I’ve always been convinced that technology was going to not only drive change, but create a new operating system for cities,” said Yarwood. Now Yarwood runs his own consultancy firm, called city 2050, and serves on Airbnb’s Mayoral Advisory Board, in addition to renting out his own home on Airbnb. He warns city officials against over-regulating particular companies in the sharing economy, for fear of undermining the trajectory of the entire sharing economy. “I think people want solutions in their lives,” Yarwood says, “but they don’t want to be told what to do.” Yarwood pointed to the example of dairy farmers in Australia and New Zealand, who are struggling to make ends meet as dairy prices drop. These farmers can now supplement their incomes by renting rooms on their dairy farms to locals and tourists interested in learning more about the industry in a personalized way.
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Future of Sharing: Will Crowd-Based Capitalism Replace Managerial Capitalism?
09/01/2018 Duración: 01h02minArun Sundararajan, a professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business and author of the recent book The Sharing Economy, believes crowd-based capitalism could replace managerial capitalism in the next 10-20 years. Sundararajan believes crowd-based capitalism is an inherently superior model, one that uses resources more efficiently, which tends to result in increased economic productivity. Crowd-based capitalism, according to Sundararajan, also tends to increase the variety, diversity, and sometimes quality of goods, which results in higher levels of consumption. Economists don’t agree on much, Sundararajan says, but “if there are two things we agree about, one is that productivity growth leads to economic growth, and the other is that increases in consumption lead to economic growth.” Sundararajan’s research also indicates that crowd-based capitalism will have an equalizing effect on the economy by beginning to de-centralize the means of production.
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Future of Sharing: The Author of “Sharing Nicely” Analyzes Society’s Progress Over a Decade Later
09/01/2018 Duración: 01h04minYochai Benkler, Berkman Professor of Entrepreneurial Legal Studies at Harvard Law School, first explored the potential of the modern sharing economy in a Yale Law Journal article in 2004, and is credited as one of the first people to articulate the concept. More than a decade later, Benkler spoke about how our reality measures up to his initial conception. In this interview, he outlined the transition of sharing information through social networks to sharing within a market framework. “It takes time to be a decent sharer,” Benkler said. “It takes emotional load. Sometimes it’s just easier to pay, depending on what you’re trying to do.” Benkler prefers the term “on-demand economy” for those companies that incorporate a market framework.
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Future of Sharing: “Innovate or Die” – How Disruption Pays Off in the Long-Term
09/01/2018 Duración: 39minGary Shapiro, president and CEO of the Consumer Technology Association (CTA), believes that while regulation isn’t necessarily bad, it shouldn’t be over-intrusive. The Disruptive Innovation Council, a subset of the CTA, does market research and lobbies governments in the hopes of promoting the idea that innovation is great for society. The CTA also rates every state in the U.S. based on how innovation-friendly it is, evaluating metrics like broadband deployment, STEM graduates, taxation systems, flexible workforce rules, and attitudes towards sharing economy companies. Shapiro believes that the attitudes of legislators towards new technology often depend on their personal familiarity with the product. If they haven’t used it themselves, or something close to it, Shapiro says, they don’t know it. Shapiro generally supports getting products to market first so that consumers can understand them before applying too much regulation.
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Future of Sharing: How Cities Around the World Approach the Sharing Economy
09/01/2018 Duración: 01h06minApril Rinne, Sharing economy expert and advisor, has traveled to almost 100 countries and worked in around 50 of them. “None define sharing the same way,” Rinne says, though she adds that the most general definition of the sharing economy involves sharing under-utilized assets, spaces, and skills. Rinne believes that there’s been a global pendulum shift in the last 18 months, one that led to an increased awareness—if not quite increased expertise—of the sharing economy among policymakers. And while the United States, and the Bay Area in particular, has maintained its role as a leader in technological innovation, it lags behind when it comes to policy innovation. Rinne discussed global policy innovations related to the sharing economy, like the UK’s sharing economy trade association, and Seoul’s Sharing City government department.
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Future or Sharing: Potential Pathways for Disruptive Companies
09/01/2018 Duración: 01h02minSunil Paul co-founded Sidecar in 2011 on a novel premise—that technology could allow anyone to become a driver and accept money for that ride. According to Paul, Sidecar, which was purchased by General Motors in early 2016, pioneered the term “ride sharing”. Paul, who views IT as a “solvent for transaction costs”, discussed his early battles regulating ride sharing in California. “In the beginning, you’re operating in a gray area,” Paul said, “but it’s more or less inevitable that there’s going to be some level of regulation.” Paul supports regulation on the state level, because he sees municipal regulation as too scattered and disparate. He encourages policymakers to look out for the public interest, and believes that promoting innovation is part of that public interest. Paul laid out three potential pathways for disruptive companies facing resistance from incumbent companies or industries: 1) Start so small and silly that you’ll be ignored, 2) Co-opt the interests of the incumbent, and 3) Challenge the incu
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Future of Sharing: Harvard’s Resident Millennial Expert Talks Politics & the Sharing Economy
09/01/2018 Duración: 56minJohn Della Volpe, Director of Polling at Harvard’s Institute of Politics and Founder and CEO of SocialSphere, has been studying Millennials since 2000. It all started, said Della Volpe, with two Harvard students who wanted to survey Millennials and find out why they were volunteering but not voting. Della Volpe has been polling and analyzing this generation—which he defines as people born between 1980 and 2000—ever since. Della Volpe discussed what he considers to be the defining characteristics of the Millennial generation, which include placing less importance on money and more on flexibility, and a relationship with the rest of the world that’s based on a collaborative approach to solving problems. Millennials also have famously low levels of trust in institutions ranging from Congress to the media, and increasingly identify as liberal, but decreasingly identify as Democrats. Della Volpe also talked about the role that Millennials played in the election. If Clinton had won 60 percent of this cohort instead
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Future of Sharing: The Emergence of the Commons-Oriented Collaborative Economy
09/01/2018 Duración: 01h02minAlbert Cañigueral, the OuiShare Connector for Spain and Latin America, is a Barcelona-based sharing economy expert helping to organize the fifth edition of OuiShare Fest, which takes place this July in Paris. Cañigueral describes himself as passionate about, but also critical of, the burgeoning sharing economy. Cañigueral acknowledged that sometimes tensions arise between global, American-based corporations and smaller, local startups. Global companies like Uber face regulatory challenges abroad similar to those they face in the United States. In Spain, only professional, licensed drivers can drive with Uber, and Uber was banned from the country for over a year, returning in March 2016. According to Cañigueral, the primary source of tension around the sharing economy in Barcelona is related to rental prices and housing shortages. Barcelona’s City Hall is focusing on growing and building the “commons-oriented collaborative economy,” and is particularly interested in promoting open source software.
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Future of Work Roundtable: The Macro View on Transitioning to the Next Economy
05/01/2018 Duración: 31minIn early December, the Berkeley Work and Intelligent Tools and Systems (WITS) working group hosted a conference to discuss working, earning, and learning in the age of intelligent tools. A number of conference participants sat down with Reinvent to talk about how they would explain the moment we’re in, what challenges we face, what solutions might get us through these challenges, and how optimistic they are about our future. These innovators, hailing from UC Berkeley, McKinsey & Company, and Schmidt Sciences, OECD, among other organizations, shared their thoughts and insights on what many of them see as the biggest economic and technological shift since the Industrial Revolution. They expressed concerns about income inequality and the skills gap, as well as the decline of corporate spending on workforce training. Many described themselves as cautious optimists. If we want to make sure that tomorrow’s economy works for everyone, not just the most highly skilled workers, the participants emphasized, we’ve
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The Macro View on Transitioning to the Next Economy
05/01/2018 Duración: 31minIn early December, the Berkeley Work and Intelligent Tools and Systems (WITS) working group hosted a conference to discuss working, earning, and learning in the age of intelligent tools. A number of conference participants sat down with Reinvent to talk about how they would explain the moment we’re in, what challenges we face, what solutions...
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Getting to the Next Successful Media Models
03/01/2018 Duración: 01h34minJune Cohen put TED Talks online and scaled their views to 100 million a year. Deron Triff then took TED Talks to 100 million views and listens a month—or 1 billion a year. The two of them are now co-founders of WaitWhat — the first-of-its-kind content incubator that develops and nurtures original media properties aimed at evoking positive emotions thought to be contagious. WaitWhat then turns its successes into diverse media experiences that reach an ever-expanding audience.
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WNNY: Preparing for the Third Digital Revolution: Fabrication
22/12/2017 Duración: 01h32minNeil Gershenfeld, Alan Gershenfeld, and Joel Cutcher-Gershenfeld used December’s What’s Now: New York as the official New York launch party for their new book Designing Reality: How to Survive and Thrive in the Third Digital Revolution. The book brings the perspectives of science, technology, social science, and humanities to the third digital revolution—through three brothers who are not only observers of the revolution but also active participants in helping guide it.
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The Millennial Generation’s Work/Life Fusion and How It Will Affect Us All
20/12/2017 Duración: 01h31minEach month at What’s Now: San Francisco we explore cutting edge innovation that’s happening in a different field in the region. In January, we looked at innovation happening not in a field but a scene that most people don’t know about. San Francisco has many examples of physical buildings, often old homes, that provide both work and living spaces for groups of people who are collaborating together and want to fuse these two sides of their lives.
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Future of Work: Determining Bargaining Power in the Platform Economy
20/12/2017 Duración: 24minBrad DeLong, UC Berkeley Economics Professor says our political system has been hacked by time, circumstance, chaos, and disaster. He pointed to the failings of the electoral college, the fact that “small states hacked the constitution in 1787, so we now have a world in which the minority in the Senate represents 175 million people, while the majority represents 145 million people”, and the gerrymandering after the 2010 census as the primary examples of this dysfunction. DeLong’s recommended fixes for the economy include a 4 percent inflation target from the Federal Reserve, incentivizing businesses to invest in workers, and reinvigorating the idea that technology should be used to augment workers, not replace them.
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Determining Bargaining Power in the Platform Economy
20/12/2017 Duración: 24minOur political system has been hacked by time, circumstance, chaos, and disaster, says UC Berkeley Economics Professor Brad DeLong. He pointed to the failings of the electoral college, the fact that "small states hacked the constitution in 1787, so we now have a world in which the minority in the Senate represents 175 million people, while the majority represents 145 million people", and the gerrymandering after the 2010 census as the primary examples of this dysfunction.
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In the Wake of the Senate’s Tax Bill, What Does Our Economic Future Look Like?
12/12/2017 Duración: 24minLaura Tyson, Faculty Director of the Institute for Business & Social Impact at the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business, took some time out of her day at a conference hosted by Berkeley and the OECD titled “Working, Earning, Learning In The Age Of Intelligent Tools” to share her thoughts on the future of work.