Re: Sharing Doesn't Always Grow
The "sharing" is the employee "sharing" their capital equipment (car/home), financial liability (insurance/asset depreciation), and labor (contractor, not employee) with their employer (multi-billion dollar corporations).
You gotta think of the "sharing economy" from the perspective of people who named it - silicon valley start-up kids.
They wanted their employees to "share" their stuff and time with them so that they could make maximum money with minimal capital and labor investment. If their employees "share" their stuff to make the "product" work, then the app developers never have to buy physical stuff - or hire real employees...
The customers were never part of the sharing equation.
The employees (and their stuff) are the product.
Not too dissimilar from the proper rethink on facebook and the rest of the "social media" crew. There, the customers are advertisers. The users are the product.
You'll find that a lot of other social media sites that rely on moderators also operate on the "sharing economy" model. Get free labor ("sharing") from the mods and content creators. Users are the product. Mods and content creators are the bait to capture the product. Advertisers are the customer. Give mods and content creators nothing. Give users nothing. Do nothing but pay a little server time and connect the two. Make billions.
It's the middle man, man.
Originally posted by jk
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You gotta think of the "sharing economy" from the perspective of people who named it - silicon valley start-up kids.
They wanted their employees to "share" their stuff and time with them so that they could make maximum money with minimal capital and labor investment. If their employees "share" their stuff to make the "product" work, then the app developers never have to buy physical stuff - or hire real employees...
The customers were never part of the sharing equation.
The employees (and their stuff) are the product.
Not too dissimilar from the proper rethink on facebook and the rest of the "social media" crew. There, the customers are advertisers. The users are the product.
You'll find that a lot of other social media sites that rely on moderators also operate on the "sharing economy" model. Get free labor ("sharing") from the mods and content creators. Users are the product. Mods and content creators are the bait to capture the product. Advertisers are the customer. Give mods and content creators nothing. Give users nothing. Do nothing but pay a little server time and connect the two. Make billions.
It's the middle man, man.
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