2021年8月3日 星期二

On Tech: Innovation invites hucksters

Unscrupulous, boundary-pushing executives seem to be an inescapable part of the most exciting technology.

Innovation invites hucksters

Unscrupulous, boundary-pushing executives seem to be an inescapable part of the most exciting technology.

Timo Lenzen

I'm angry about start-up founders who over-promise, behave badly and sometimes crater their companies and walk away unscathed.

But deep down, I also wonder whether unscrupulous, boundary-pushing executives are an inescapable part of innovation — rather than an aberration.

If we want world-changing technology, are hucksters part of the deal? This is a version of a question that I wrestle with about technologies including Facebook and Uber: Is the best of what technology can do inextricably linked to all the horribles?

I've been thinking about this recently because of the glare on two start-up founders, Adam Neumann and Trevor Milton.

Neumann used to be the chief executive of the office rental start-up WeWork. He boasted that his company would transform the nature of work (on Earth and Mars), forge new bonds of social cohesion and make boatloads of money. WeWork has done none of those things.

A new book details the ways that WeWork mostly just rented cubicles, burned through piles of other people's money, treated employees like garbage and made Neumann stinking rich as the company nearly collapsed in 2019. WeWork has stuck around in less outlandish form without Neumann.

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And last week, federal authorities charged Milton with duping investors in his electric truck start-up Nikola into believing that the company's battery- and hydrogen-powered vehicle technology was far more capable than it really was. Among the allegations are that Milton ordered the doctoring of a promotional video to make a Nikola prototype truck appear to be fully functional when it was not. (Milton's legal team has said that the government was seeking to "criminalize lawful business conduct.")

It's easy to shake your head at these people and others — including the Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes who will soon be on trial for fraud — and wonder what personal failures led them to mislead, hype, and crash and burn.

But people like Holmes, Neumann and Milton are not oopsies. They are the extreme outcomes of a start-up system that rewards people who have the biggest and most outrageous ideas possible, even if they have to fudge a little (or a lot).

I am constantly furious about this system that seems to force start-ups to shoot for the moon, or else. WeWork had a basically smart, if not entirely original, idea to remove many of the headaches of commercial office leasing. But that wasn't enough, and I almost don't blame Neumann for that.

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Disproportionate rewards go to the entrepreneurs and companies that can sell a vision of billions of users and values in the trillions of dollars. This is why Airbnb doesn't merely say that it lets people rent a home in an app. The company says that Airbnb helps "people satisfy a fundamental human need for connection." It's why delivery companies like Uber and DoorDash are aiming to deliver any possible physical product to anyone, and companies think they have to make virtual reality become as popular as smartphones. Merely earthbound ambitions aren't good enough.

Those conditions tempt people to skirt the edges of what's right and legal. But I also wonder if curtailing the excesses would also curb the ambition that we want. Sometimes the zeal to imagine ridiculously grand visions of the future brings us Theranos. And sometimes it brings us Google. Are these two sides of the same coin?

Elon Musk shows both the good and the bad of what happens when technologists dream outlandishly big. Perhaps more than any single person, Musk has made it possible for automakers, governments and all of us to imagine electric cars replacing conventional ones. This is a potentially planet-transforming change.

But Musk has also endangered people's lives by overhyping driver-assistance technology, has repeatedly over-promised technology that hasn't panned out and has skirted both the law and human decency.

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I used to half-jokingly ask a former colleague: Why can't Musk just make cars? But maybe it's impossible to separate the reckless carnival barker who deludes himself and others from the bold ideas that really are helping to change the world for the better.

I hate thinking this. I want to believe that technologies can succeed without aiming to reprogram all of humanity and without the associated temptations to engage in fraud or abuse. I want the good Musk without the bad. I want the wonderful and empowering elements of social media without the genocide. But I just don't know if we can separate the wonderful from the awful.

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Before we go …

  • The next target of China's tech crackdown? The authorities showed that they may be unhappy with video game companies, my colleague Cao Li reported, and stock prices crashed for some big Chinese game makers. China's government has pushed recently for tighter regulation of tech companies, including going after Chinese companies that go public outside the country, those that provide food delivery or online tutoring and the country's ubiquitous WeChat app.
  • That's one way to get Facebook's attention: It's almost impossible for people who lose access to their Facebook accounts to get hold of anyone at the company for help. Some people figured out a workaround, NPR reported: Buy one of Facebook's $299 Oculus virtual reality headsets, call Oculus's customer service team and have them help restore a Facebook account. Yeah, that's nuts, and it doesn't always work.
  • The mystery of the missing Dan Brown book: My colleague Caity Weaver goes down a rabbit hole to figure out if a botched bar code explains why online book resellers kept sending the wrong titles to someone trying to buy a novelty 1995 dating book by the author of "The Da Vinci Code."

Hugs to this

A very fast and acrobatic cat interrupted a baseball game for multiple minutes, as the crowd cheered it on and booed the pesky humans trying to shoo the cat off the field. My colleague Daniel Victor wrote about the animal antics in professional baseball on Monday night.

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2021年7月31日 星期六

Back to School in the Age of Delta

In-person learning fears, vaccine trials for kids and more from NYT Parenting.
A roundup of new guidance and stories from NYT Parenting.
Golden Cosmos

While it might seem like summer has only just begun, for some kids it's already time to get back to class — and many U.S. school districts are returning to in-person instruction. That fact is making some parents fearful for their children's health as the coronavirus continues to spread and local school boards squabble over mask mandates.

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This week, Tara Parker-Pope addresses your fears and concerns with an article that answers questions such as: How can it be safe for children to go back to classrooms during a pandemic? What are the risks of Covid-19 and the Delta variant to children? And what precautions can we take at home to lower a child's risk?

"While much of the public health conversation has been focused on booster shots and breakthrough infections, parents are frustrated at the lack of advice for families," Tara writes, "particularly those with children under 12 years old, who are not yet eligible for a Covid vaccine."

Meanwhile, vaccine makers are expanding clinical trials to include more children in the 5- to 11-year-old age range, in order to detect rare side effects that may be associated with the shot. "Those include myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, and pericarditis, inflammation of the lining around the heart, multiple people familiar with the trials said," Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Sharon LaFraniere and Noah Weiland report.

As summer wraps up, Ellen Barry finds that a high demand for workers across the country has hit summer camps particularly hard: "While most camps have found ways to navigate the smaller labor pool, some camp directors complain that young adults they have hired are 'ghosting' them — failing to show up or leaving jobs without notice."

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In the On Tech newsletter, Shira Ovide writes that screen time for kids isn't necessarily the boogeyman it's been painted to be. And finally, Grace Loh Prasad details an art project that has sustained her family through the pandemic: origami.

Thanks for reading!

— Melonyce McAfee, senior editor, NYT Parenting

THIS WEEK IN NYT PARENTING

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Getty Images

Kids Are Going Back to School. How Do We Keep Them Safe?

As the Delta variant rages, parents remain confused about how their children can safely return to classrooms in the midst of a pandemic. Here are answers to common questions.

By Tara Parker-Pope

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Grace Loh Prasad

Marking a Pandemic, One Crane at a Time

My son and I took on what seemed like a simple project: fold one origami crane every day during the pandemic. Together, we discovered over the year how making art helps people bear the unbearable.

By Grace Loh Prasad

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Shawn Rocco/Duke Health, via Reuters

Vaccine Makers Are Asked to Expand Safety Studies on Children

The F.D.A. wants Pfizer and Moderna to increase the number of 5- to 11-year-olds who participate in trials of their coronavirus vaccines to ensure there is enough data about rare side effects.

By Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Sharon LaFraniere and Noah Weiland

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Bryan Anselm for The New York Times

Camps Have Been Scrambling for Counselors. Some Have Even Closed.

Summer camps have reopened into a tight labor market without the international seasonal workers they often depend on.

By Ellen Barry

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Shuhua Xiong

on tech

The Messy Truth About Kids' Screen Time

Absolute rules about children and technology don't help, says a child development expert.

By Shira Ovide

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Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let's celebrate the tiny victories.

Our 18-month-old daughter is currently obsessed with the song "If You're Happy and You Know It." As it turns out, she happily does whatever the prompt is. Typically, she hates brushing her teeth and having her diaper changed, but if we add whatever the task is to the song, she goes along with a big happy smile on her face. Game changer! — Jenny Jacobi, Austin

If you want a chance to get your Tiny Victory published, find us on Instagram @NYTparenting and use the hashtag #tinyvictories; email us; or enter your Tiny Victory at the bottom of this page. Include your full name and location. Tiny Victories may be edited for clarity and style. Your name, location and comments may be published, but your contact information will not. By submitting to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the Reader Submission Terms in relation to all of the content and other information you send to us.

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