Current:Home > reviewsPerspective: What you're actually paying for these free digital platforms -FinanceMind
Perspective: What you're actually paying for these free digital platforms
View
Date:2025-04-14 10:36:52
This piece originally appeared on The Dispatch, a site that focuses on fact-based reporting and commentary on politics, policy and culture – informed by conservative principles.
About a week ago, I was out at a bar celebrating a friend’s admission into law school when a friend and I struck up a conversation with a stranger. After some back and forth over 30 minutes or so, he told us that he was reading Yanis Varoufakis’ new book, Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism, likely intrigued by the recent Wired interview with the author. I’m sure I came off as rude, but as soon as he mentioned the title I reflexively said, “Oof, I would be careful with that one.”
Truth be told, I had read only excerpts, so I tore through the book over the last couple of days and it was … largely what I expected.
While interesting in parts, I found Technofeudalism deeply unsatisfying as a piece of tech analysis. For over a quarter-century, social scientists across disciplines have explored how digital platforms like Facebook and Apple’s App Store price their goods, how users feel about their online experiences, and how these dynamics foster innovation. None of that work, which netted at least one Nobel Prize and has been cited in Supreme Court cases, is referenced or seriously discussed.
To its credit, the book is pretty sweeping. It includes “a child’s introduction to historical materialism,” commentary on why “Keynes wanted to stop us thinking of money as a thing,” a dive into Thomas More’s Utopia, diatribes against bitcoin, the death of liberalism, and countless other bits. But the driving question of Technofeudalism comes from an interaction that Varoufakis had with his late father, who wondered, “Now that computers speak to each other, will this network make capitalism impossible to overthrow? Or might it finally reveal its Achilles heel?”
Varoufakis’ answer comes in the form of a new theory about tech platforms. He writes:
If we do pay attention, it is not hard to see that capital’s mutation into what I call cloud capital has demolished capitalism’s two pillars: markets and profits. Of course, markets and profits remain ubiquitous – indeed, markets and profits were ubiquitous under feudalism, too – they just aren’t running the show anymore. What has happened over the last two decades is that profit and markets have been evicted from the epicenter of our economic and social system, pushed out to its margins, and replaced. With what? Markets, the medium of capitalism, have been replaced by digital trading platforms which look like, but are not, markets, and are better understood as fiefdoms. And profit, the engine of capitalism, has been replaced with its feudal predecessor: rent.
Like a puppy that hears an odd sound, my head pivoted and my focus sharpened when I read this passage. The digital platforms that Varoufakis singles out – including Apple, Meta, and Alphabet – are among the most profitable companies ever. It seems like a big stretch to say that profit “has been replaced with its feudal predecessor: rent.” Later in the book, Varoufakis effectively admits that the term “rent” refers to the earnings that come from land, labor, and capital – so rent has never really gone away. In reality, he wants to connect the experience of being on a digital platform with that of feudal serfs who were tied to the land and lived a subsistence life. The problem? I can close my Facebook account, but serfs couldn’t walk away. This mashup of ideas ultimately makes Technofeudalism not just a confused book but also an incredibly limiting one.
Besides, there is wide agreement in economics, sociology, information theory, and even Supreme Court precedent that these digital platforms are markets. They are a unique kind of market, in fact, that joins two or more groups together for mutual benefit. Along with the wider tech community, economists refer to them as multi-sided markets.
What are multi-sided markets?
Social media sites, search engines, and app stores are all multi-sided markets, along with malls, credit cards, and gaming consoles. These markets have been around for centuries, but with the advent of modern communication systems and the internet, the cost to connect dropped, allowing platforms to play the role of matchmaker. The difficulty has always been in finding mutually advantageous pricing and investment strategies that keep everyone on the platform. Think about Facebook: Without good content, users leave, and when users leave, advertisers find other outlets to place their ads. It is this relationship between the two parties that drives user prices toward zero.
Read more:
- The Moving Goal Posts of the Net Neutrality Debate
- Why DOJ’s Antitrust Case Against Apple Falls Flat
- Optimism in a Time of Doomsaying
- Google's Gaza issue
Still, this tendency for social media sites and search engines to be free causes confusion about what’s actually happening. As I have written before,
The term free is deceptive. In one context, free means that a good or service has no explicit price. In this sense, free means that there is zero price at the point of use, such that consumption does not depend on the ability to pay. On the other hand, free also suggests that a thing or service has no cost. But every choice comes with a cost, or more precisely, an opportunity cost. In the classic definition offered by economist James Buchanan, opportunity cost is the anticipated value of “that which might be” if the choice were made differently.
Social media platforms, though free of charge, charge a hidden expense: the opportunity cost of time.Will Rinehart, The Dispatch
This is why I have railed against that old adage in tech: If you aren’t paying, then you’re the product. You are never not paying, though. You are paying with your time. You are paying with your attention. Social media platforms, though free of charge, charge a hidden expense: the opportunity cost of time. Every hour on Facebook is an hour not spent hiking or playing basketball or hanging with friends. And the last time that I added it up, someone using social media for 40 minutes a day implicitly values the site by over $5,600 for a year. For a deep dive into this, check out my piece titled “The attention economy: a history of the term, its economics, its value, and how it is changing politics.”
Reframing our online experiences this way, as part of a multi-sided market, leads us to far more interesting questions than what Varoufakis explores in Technofeudalism. What we should be thinking about – indeed what we are arguing over – is whether or not these platforms are worth the attention that we give them. For kids especially, I’m not sure the easy access to content is a good thing. They should be learning and exploring the world, not spending time in front of a screen swiping. Still, by firmly planting analysis in multi-sided markets, Varoufakis could have better explained why users migrate away from the big platforms, the subtle influence of content moderation choices, and how these tech giants are both allowing new kinds of speech and disallowing other kinds of speech – all of which he tries to tackle in the book.
Of course, this isn’t the book that Varoufakis wrote. So who out there wants to give me a fat book contract to write it?
veryGood! (3743)
Related
- Sam Taylor
- Chicago police search for a 16-year-old boy who vanished from O'Hare International Airport
- Ava Phillippe Reveals One More Way She’s Taking After Mom Reese Witherspoon
- Mega Millions jackpot at $1.25 billion, fourth-largest in history: When is next drawing?
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Madonna says she's 'lucky' to be alive after ICU hospitalization, thanks her children
- MLB trade deadline live updates: All the deals and moves that went down on Tuesday
- Uber is soaring. Could it become a trillion-dollar stock?
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Climate change made July hotter for 4 of 5 humans on Earth, scientists find
Ranking
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Connecticut TV news anchor reveals she carried painful secret of her mother's murder to protect Vermont police investigation
- MLB trade deadline's fantasy impact: Heavy on pitching, light on hitting
- Hawaii man dies after being mauled by 4 large dogs, police investigate owners under negligence law
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Benefit Cosmetics 2 for 1 Deal: Get Natural-Looking, Full Eyebrows With This Volumizing Tinted Gel
- Black bear, cub euthanized after attacking man opening his garage door in Idaho
- Trucking works to expand diversity, partly due to a nationwide shortage of drivers
Recommendation
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Palestinian opens fire in West Bank settlement, wounding 6 people before being killed
Judge denies bond for woman charged in crash that killed newlywed, saying she's a flight risk
ESPN's Pat McAfee apologizes, then defends his post about Larry Nassar, Michigan State
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
Lionel Messi, Inter Miami face Orlando City in Leagues Cup Round of 32: How to stream
BNSF train engineers offered paid sick time and better schedules in new deal
Malians who thrived with arrival of UN peacekeeping mission fear economic fallout from its departure