Just as I was doing a bit of mindmapping of ideas around
Internet and societal convergence, my RSS reader buzzed with a new post from
Dion Hinchcliffe on Social Computing and Internet Singularity. Dion didn’t go
into great details; referring instead to ideas he had articulated in earlier
posts. His posting was, however, enough to prompt me to pull together my
thoughts, give them a bit more structure and then send them into the great wide
world to begin a life of their own.
The idea around Internet singularity, to reuse the quote
that Dion referenced from Microsoft’s Dr. Gary Flake is “the idea that a
deeper and tighter coupling between the online and offline worlds will
accelerate science, business, society, and self-actualization.” “Wow, is Flake talking about true,
top-of-the-Maslow pyramid type self actualization” you might ask yourself. I
can’t say for sure since self-actualization means different things to different
people. To me at least, it appears that the Internet, in its many incarnations,
enables the creativity, knowledge, and energy of billions of people to be set
free from the shackles of time and space to which they’ve been confined since
the beginning of time. This sounds very powerful except that you now have
billions of people running in millions of different directions. I postulate
that what’s missing in our collective journey to self-actualization is a next
generation coordination mechanism.

I use the term next
generation because coordination mechanisms have been around as long as
human societies. Monarchs coordinated the construction of pyramids and
cathedrals; governments coordinated the creation of nations and cities;
corporations coordinated the design, manufacture, and sale of products. Who
will coordinate the creative energies of these billions of people now that they
can collaborate across space and time? How will their diverse priorities be
aligned? What laws will govern the products produced by citizens of this world’s
diverse nations?
I’m not suggesting
an Orwellian type mechanism to control the masses. Instead, I’m stating the rather
simple fact that few of the things society values today (with the exception of some
varieties of arts & letters and products of the remaining lone craftsmen,
perhaps) are products of a single individual’s labor. The products we use, the
homes we live in, the organizations we work for, and yes, even the children we
raise, are all products of teams. Yet, individuals rarely function in teams in
the Web 2.0 world. In fact, the Web 2.0 world encourages the free-agent, lone
gun, mentality. Creating your own movies, podcasts, publications, and software
services are the order of the day. “As long as you expose these things to be
‘mashed up’ or they are collected in a common repository”, goes the common
thinking, “we are building communities.”
I submit that when
we mash things up, we rarely ever get anything more than mash, mush or some
similar m*sh. Coming from a huge fan of Google Maps mashups; I can say that these
mashups aren’t getting me any closer to self-actualization. Are the mashups
fascinating and fun? Sure. Are they accelerating science, business, society,
and self-actualization? Not so much. Acceleration, the type I believe of which
Flake speaks, is facilitated by communities of likeminded individuals in
pursuit of something greater than the individual. The names in the halls of
greatness span the decades: NASA, DARPA, Bell Labs, Xerox PARC, the Manhattan
Project. These organizations have achieved the ends which I believe Flake
professes. Web 2.0’s Ajax-based maps and digital audio / video are at best
standing on the shoulders of giants when compared with such predecessors.
So where does this
leave Social Computing and Internet Singularity? Surely there are enough
serious challenges that would benefit from a networked team of one billion
minds – think global warming and alternative energy, stem cell, DNA, AIDS, and
cancer research, space travel and so many more things. With corporations and
governments cutting funding for long-term scientific research in favor of
short-term profits and political partisanship, respectively, the opportunity is
there for someone to fill the shoes of the next generation coordinator.
Can such
coordination be done via the Web? How would such projects be funded? How would
patents and intellectual property be handled? What aside from money would
motivate people to participate in such projects? All these questions and more
have yet to be handled in a serious and pragmatic fashion. It’s the answer
to these questions and the energy of the visionaries that choose to tackle
them, not AJAX and SOA, that will get us all climbing Maslow’s pyramid.