The Internet Revolution
Technology & Disruption
The Internet Revolution is the New Industrial Revolution
By Micha Kaufman via Forbes
In the mid-90s, ARPANet
was transformed from a military safety net to the civilian Internet
that has become such an integral part of our lives, bringing with it
change not only technological, but societal and epic in scope.
Consider the following: Forty years ago, the average person followed an employment path
largely determined by birth and education, often committing to one
employer until retirement. Today you probably wouldn’t even consider
that as a viable option. Success
is no longer solely determined by the right education, the perfect
resume, or even your age and background. Teens as young as 12 are now coding websites,
producing films and building networks through social media. By the time
they’re adults, this online generation will already have some skills
and real-world experience that a formal education just can’t provide.
The Internet is bringing a revolution along with it. Access to
information combined with global supply and demand is reshaping
established conventions and destroying old world definitions.
To understand where I am going with this, take the word ‘local.’ It
once referred to your own street, town or even the state you lived in,
but now everywhere is local. Americans are outsourcing their
services to companies from China to Brazil, all from the comfort of
their own homes. Where once our reach was limited by physical
boundaries, today almost everyone and everything is just a digital
handshake away.
Long established workplace conventions – from defined office hours to
physical office space – are being tossed out the window. Success was
once defined by a suit and the ‘9 to 5’; now it can achieved by working
in pajamas and starting at noon after a morning at the gym and leisurely
latte. The very definition of ‘success’ is now drastically changing. It
once meant a “keeping up with the Joneses” lifestyle your neighbors
would be envious of; now it’s about making personal, intimate choices
about how to live your life. Of course some still associate it purely
with wealth, but for many, success is being measured in other ways
–happiness, freedom, health, more time for travel and family.
Interconnected societies are the global engine that transforms people
from employees to micro entrepreneurs. Anyone now has the opportunity
to monetize their skills, from the full-time worker looking for
additional income to the once hobbyist building their very own business.
True change affects both young and old, and while 15-year old hedge fund managers may capture the imagination, we’ve got 80-year old entrepreneurs grabbing headlines
too. It’s truly an uncontested market where talent, skills and
experience become commodities outside the narrow boundaries of
traditional employment (if such a thing as “traditional” even exists
anymore).
As we engage in a century where everyone is not only a global
citizen, but a valuable “Brand in Waiting,” we begin to understand that
the Internet Revolution IS in fact the Industrial Revolution of our
time. It’s a sweeping social disruption that brings with it not only new
inventions and scientific advances, but perhaps most importantly
revolutionizes both the methods of work and we the workers ourselves.
It’s the return of personal choice and personal definitions of value,
as we increasingly define ourselves by the work we produce rather than
being defined only by the work available.
Micha Kaufman, Contributor
I’m a geek, startup hacker & Internet entrepreneur.
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"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
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