About Jeff Jarvis: Jeff Jarvis is an American journalist, professor, public speaker and former television critic. He advocates the Open Web and argues that there are many social and personal benefits to living a more public life on the internet.
Make it so obvious even a computer couldn't be confused.
We the people have more power than we know, and we must learn to use it judiciously.
You hand over control, you start winning.
Perhaps we need to separate youth from education. Education lasts forever. Youth is the time for exploration, maturation, socialization.
In the real world, the tests are all open book.
There is an inverse relationship between control and trust. Trust is more of a two-way exchange than most people, especially those in power, realize. Leaders in government, news media, universities, and corporations think they can own trust, when, of...
The web of trust is built at eye level, peer to peer.
Managing relationships (with start ups) is more like teaching.
We no longer need companies, institutions, or government to organize us. We now have the tools to organize ourselves. We can find each other and coalesce around political causes or bad companies or talent or business or ideas.
This practically unlimited supply of advertisers in a fluid marketplace appears to be a new economic model that may insulate Google from some of the dynamics of an economy built on mass and scarcity. Google has its own economy.
Owning pipelines, people, products, or even intellectual property is no longer the key to success. Openness is.
Where some see a new world disorder, others see the opportunity to bring organization.
The cost of independence has dropped.
The only sane response to change is to find the opportunity in it.