Wednesday, May 17, 2006

social R & D

Is it possible to do true Social R&D?

A lot of the Web 2.0 services currently talked about start serendipitously; they are wanderings in the social-systems space, and once they begin to hum they produce a gravity that attracts participants, they distort the opportunity space for later entrants, and then finally they produce an "exhaust" which may or may not be valuable. They are Research in the pure sense not the applied sense; they seek only to prove or falsify the proposition that they are useful. And they are Development only in the sense that some of them stick and then go on to begin to change how society functions; they are not Development in sense of the pragmatic application of research results for commercial gain. They cannot be Development in this sense, purely because they cannot be tested on a closed user group or in controlled environments. They only work on the entire population.

The question I want to ask is; can there be social R & D? Is there any way to do applied social research and then pragmatically develop commercial propositions from it? Or is the combined positive feedback from the waves and waves of cost free collaboration that is currently being implemented too seductive to resist and too transformative to predict?

We are by definition the most reciprocally altruistic organism to evolve. For individual users, the net has moved the cost of minor altruistic behavior near to zero, and the compound benefit that is derived from massive amounts of minor altruism may be the greatest of all transformations of the social space to occur. And it is very likely that it is still in its earliest stages.

4 comments:

Trickish Knave said...

Are you the same Daniel Barton that who quoted the last 2 paragraphs of this post from Union Squares?

Union Square Ventures Article

Interesting concept but it is too wordy for me- sounds like Spock trying to make a point: "...altruistic organisms, Captian, are blah blah blah..."

enthusiastic amateur said...

yes that is me. And you are right I am a vulcan. But why are you be visiting my spockish website? You have so many great past-times!!

Trickish Knave said...

LOL, I just happened to come acrtoss it by accident and the only reason I remembered it is from the Harvard language you used. I love busting out a dictionary when reading a post, mainly because my voabulary isn't that broad.

enthusiastic amateur said...

Nevertheless very curious that you should come across both postings. Next time I think of something to talk about I am going to word it up bigtime.