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Don Tapscott: "I said, we could lose our privacy in a near remarkable way. Check. I said it's possible that this digital age will be captured by some powerful forces, big companies, governments, and that the benefits could be asymmetrical and that we could have growing wealth creation but declining prosperity, and that ocial inequality would grow. Check. I said, it's possible the technology would be so powerful that it will wipe out whole sectors of the workforce. Well, partial check on that. The number one job type in the United States in 48 of 50 states is truck driver. I think most of those will be gone in a decade. I said, I think this technology will bring us together because we'll all have access to the truth. But it's possible people could follow their own point of view and we'd all end up to be self-reinforcing echo chambers where the purpose of information would not be to inform us, but would be to give us comfort and that there would be a fragmentation of public discourse. Check. So, I won't go through the rest, but it's kind of worrisome that the person who sold more books according to my publisher about the digital age than anyone else, and who's been its biggest champion, is now writing that we have a problem, Houston, and that there are some big big social issues that we need to deal with. This has been a big theme of what I've been working on now over the next period is basically to draft a new social contract for the digital age."
Don Tapscott is an Author, Futurist, and Associate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University. [ Ссылка ]
"Digital Transformation: Visions of Nations, Companies, and People" is a film by Manuel Stagars.
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