NETOCRACY
the new power elite and life after capitalism
Jan Soderqvist, Alexander
Bard
In Detail
"Digging deeper and
wider than any previous effort into what the information revolution truly means, Netocracy
is the must-read. Netocracy is the unsurpassable how and when of this whole
revolution." Kjell A. Nordström and Jonas Ridderstrale, authors of Funky
Business
The world will not live
without logos, but neither will capitalism silently take over democracy. What comes next?
Forget capitalism and the
class struggle, we are witnessing the birth of a whole new world. The digital revolution
is, in fact, changing things far more dramatically then the hype-mongers of tech
Internet ever imagined - only not in the way that they and their
investors hoped. The move from a society dominated by print and broadcast mass
media to the age of interactivity is at least as dramatic as the move from feudalism to
capitalism.
After capitalism comes
attentionalism. Those who can harness global networks of information and master new forms
of communication will control business, finance and legislation, forming the new business
and government elites. They will inherit the power; they are the Netocracy.
Driven by the Internet and
mobile communications, networks are turning into the major means of doing business,
organising action, getting knowledge; the organising principle for the information age.
Simply put, networks will make the world go round. So controlling the networks of this
world will soon count for more than controlling the capital. Manuel Castells has described
the Internet as the most extraordinary technological revolution in history. But he also
suggests it is as underdeveloped socially as it is overdeveloped technologically. The
societal implications of the communications revolution are going to hit soon. Netocracy
predicts what they will be, where the power will flow and draws some remarkable
conclusions about life after capitalism.
And who will have the power
in a world dominated by networks?
The Internet has often been
touted as a radically decentralized unpredictable phenomenon thriving beyond the control
of individuals, corporations or governments. In Netocracy, Bard and Soderqvist state show
that the transparent and non-hierarchical society proclaimed by the enthusiastic early
Internet pioneers is one of the greatest myths of the information age. Future society will
be hierarchical. It will be divided - but not along lines of wealth and academic merit.
Capitalist structures will be broken down.
Power will not lie with those
who own the means of production, but with those who sort and provide information :
"It is the people who can create and sustain attention that are the Netocracy, the
new holders of power, not those who simply supply capital."People who can manipulate
networks and the information that runs through them will inherit the future. These are the
netocrats. The netocracy consists of people with excellent social skills and a talent for
the adept manipulation of information. Those without this ability to use the new
interactive media technology to their advantage will form the lower classes of the digital
age.
netocrat [ne1to-krat] n. The
netocrat has created and not inherited his social identity. He/she is self-made in the
most fundamental meaning of the word. The netocrat has money but it is a means and not an
end goal. He/she outsmarts the capitalist by ruling the networks that now rule the world.
The netocrat is an artistic and political manipulator who has turned networking into an
artform.
"Alexander Bard, author
of 80 hit singles in Scandinavia, is a record producer, Internet mogul, philosophy
enthusiast, and much more." FTDynamo, Euro-Gurus
268 pages