Balaji Srinivasan: How To Build Your Own Country in the Cloud
The Network State author and serial entrepreneur on the future of freedom, online and offline.
HD DownloadIn 2013, the serial entrepreneur Balaji Srinivasan gave a widely discussed talk at the tech incubator Y Combinator on a paradigm derived from the work of political economist Albert O. Hirschman. There are two basic paths to reform, he explained: You can speak up and remake a system from within ("voice") or you can simply leave and build something new that might one day takes its place ("exit").
That latter concept is the framework through which Silicon Valley tends to solve problems, and it captures the worldview of Srinivasan, whom venture capitalist Marc Andreessen says has "the highest output per minute of new ideas of anybody I've ever met in my life."
In his new book, The Network State: How to Start a New Country, Srinivasan makes the case for migrating much—though not all—of our lives onto the internet while changing how we get together in meatspace. Ever-improving digital tools give humans an unprecedented and always-accelerating ability to create opt-in, fully voluntary communities where people choose to meet, work, live, and love.
From existing, terrestrial countries that are attracting immigrants with the promise of a better standard of living to blockchain communities that draw participants by laying out clear-cut, contractual rules, responsibilities, and obligations, Srinivasan articulates a future that is profoundly democratic and consensual—thus liberating us from a status quo in which self-determination is little more than a pipe-dream.
Raised in suburban Long Island, Srinivasan holds a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Stanford. He co-founded the genetic testing firm Counsyl and served as the first chief technology officer of Coinbase, the cryptocurrency exchange. He's been a fierce critic of the FDA, which might account for his being short-listed to head up the agency under President Donald Trump.
"What if this coronavirus is the pandemic that public health people have been warning about for years?," he tweeted in January 2020, as Vox and mainstream outlets were busy attacking Silicon Valley venture capitalists for taking the crisis too seriously. "It would accelerate many pre-existing trends," he wrote, "border closures, nationalism, social isolation, preppers, remote work, face masks, distrust in governments."
Reason talked with Srinivasan about The Network State, the rise of China as a tightly centralized global power, and the future of freedom both online and offline.*
CORRECTION: The original version of this writeup mischaracterized Srinivasan's opinion on whether Peter Thiel is part of the "descending class."
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Srinivasan makes the case for migrating much—though not all—of our lives onto the internet while changing how we get together in meatspace. Ever-improving digital tools give humans an unprecedented and always-accelerating ability to create opt-in, fully voluntary communities where people choose to meet, work, live, and love.
So basically the elevator pitch for a corporate ad-supported metaverse.
Yeah, no. Physical nation/states are not going to allow people to execute a "virtual" exit.
A network/cloud based "state" will have precisely zero means of protecting it's "citizens" from the jurisdiction of the physical states they necessarily live in. This is a bigger vaporware scam than Musk's Hyperloop.
I haven't listened to this and won't; I'll read a transcript if they have one.
But I think you are misreading how such a transformation could take place. It would happen in parallel, not as a sudden shift. It's already happening in small doses, barter that government can't see. Anyone who thinks government burrocracies can move as fast as private people dodging its clutches has too much faith in government and too little in individuals.
"Vox and mainstream outlets were busy attacking Silicon Valley venture capitalists for taking the crisis too seriously"
What is interesting is that in fact, Silicon Valley *was* one of the biggest reasons that the Pandemic Response was so draconian. It was silicon valley intellectual elites who publicized the terrible "2 weeks to flatten the curve" graphs that you would see on every mayoral and gubernatorial presser that announced the lock down. There was a website setup with slick graphs, state by state, that you saw printed out on big posters.
SV is full of Very Smart People (tm) who love nothing more than to tell others how to live their lives. And those people, despite being Very Smart, had no appreciation of what their advocacy actually did to middle America. They patted themselves on their backs for the "sacrifice" of living a staycation at home, proclaiming "We're in this together!" and trading sourdough recipes. Meanwhile flyover country was utterly wrecked as small businesses failed one after another.
I think there is much to be excited about in SV. I've worked there for nearly 30 years. And when they stay in their lane, there is so much they can do. The problem is that they don't stay in their lane. They think that what works for an insular community of technologists simply must work for the rest of the world, and like the Alliance in the Firefly/Serenity series, they won't stop until they have rammed it down our throats whether we like it or not.
History since Gutenberg's printing press is a continual, if bumpy, decentralization of information and government, and I've often wondered about the current trend in more government, whether it is real or just seems real, and whether previous generations thought the same.
At any rate, it's seemed to me that one way to solve the problem and continue Gutenberg's trend is the dark web and mesh networks. More and more of our lives can be handled digitally, from movies to reading to even travel with Google street views. Facebook's metaverse is a terrible first attempt from what I see, but it won't be the last.
My theory is that government will continue to suffocate meatspace, tax everything physical in sight, but as the economy moves out of sight, their scope for control and taxation will shrink, and maybe in a couple of generations, if the dark web handles 90% of the economy, government will gradually starve itself out of control, as the Catholic Church has in the past 500 years.
Seriously, I do think it's a plausible outcome. People still go to church, but voluntarily, not because the church was mandatory. People live together without benefit of clergy, and clergy no longer have immunity from secular laws. What is the same reformation hits meatspace government?