Site icon The Next Avenue

Reopening Debate Opens Tech Rift

Read The Full Article On: Axios

The debate over reopening the economy splits Silicon Valley, like every other community in the U.S., in two. But in place of the usual blue state/red state, Democrat/Republican divide, tech’s argument is between technocrats and libertarians.

Why it matters: The pandemic has only amplified tech giants’ power, ensuring their mindset and choices will play an outsize role in shaping how the U.S. reopens its economy. Nailing or bungling that process could save or cost the nation thousands of lives and billions of dollars.

The big picture: Tech’s most influential companies and leaders were among the first to send workers home when the pandemic hit, and the industry’s “trust the data” mindset has shaped their response.

A leading voice throughout the crisis has been industry icon Bill Gates, who has devoted much of his philanthropic career to public health and long warned of the dangers of a pandemic.

Yes, but: As the weeks of shutdown drag on and the economic price of the coronavirus crisis soars, a dissenting tech faction has coalesced around a “damn the virus, full speed ahead” sentiment.

Between the lines: CEOs of companies that deal in physical goods (like Musk’s Tesla) are feeling sharper pressure to reopen fast than those who run software empires that can operate more smoothly and safely by remote.

Our thought bubble: Musk’s “free America now” argument is a corollary of the industry’s cult of the founder, which celebrates the visionary individual who bets on a personal vision.

The bottom line: Founders and VCs are gamblers and risk-takers, but most people are not. Laws and customs usually aim to balance individual rights with group needs. Most tech CEOs share the public consensus to give our collective needs some extra priority right now.

Exit mobile version