Google is a catalogue. There is no physical analogy that comes close.
Your point about wanting to read articles written for you by others is certainly possible. The very fact that such a desirable outcome drives you to Google and nowhere else should suggest the complexity of the problem they’re solving and how there isn’t really anything else out there doing so well.
>Ideally as few as possible should profit from this process.
Why?
When you accepted a job offer in the software industry, did you stipulate that your mission is to write code for your employer and you will be charging as little as possible for that privilege? Minimum wage should get you by just fine, right?
I hate fully grown adults behaving as though anyone except them making a profit is somehow evil.
> The very fact that such a desirable outcome drives you to Google and nowhere else should suggest the complexity of the problem they’re solving and how there isn’t really anything else out there doing so well.
Yes and I'm not impressed.
> > Ideally as few as possible should profit from this process.
> Why?
> When you accepted a job offer in the software industry, did you stipulate that your mission is to write code for your employer and you will be charging as little as possible for that privilege? Minimum wage should get you by just fine, right?
I'm not a good example as I indeed live wonderfully on minimum wage and write software for free.
> I hate fully grown adults behaving as though anyone except them making a profit is somehow evil.
Don't worry, my philosophy is not that superficial. We have people who make things, people who organize the making of things and people who organize the things made.
It can be true that the meta data is more valuable than the data it self and organizing an effort can be much more intense than any of the tasks involved. But lets not pretend that is always the case.
Before money and before the written word we had the exchange of thoughts, observations and ideas. I believe this to be somewhat like the foundation on which everything else we did is build. I want to see this process benefit from technology.
You wrote your comment perhaps a bit limited by the ropes of the platform but sincerely, free from any agenda, you wrote pretty much what you think.
Now if we [beyond HN] add additional layers of agendas between our exchange, each interested in maximizing their profit from it perhaps not you but many others will resort to self-moderation.
You wont be able to state it simply like: "I hate fully grown adults behaving as though anyone except them making a profit is somehow evil."
It could become something like "I don't understand why some people don't like others making money" stripped from how strong you feel about the subject. You could also chose not to say anything.
At that point we are messing with the very fabric of our collective reality.
If I had to chose between freely communicating and the economy it wouldn't be a hard choice.
Your point about wanting to read articles written for you by others is certainly possible. The very fact that such a desirable outcome drives you to Google and nowhere else should suggest the complexity of the problem they’re solving and how there isn’t really anything else out there doing so well.
>Ideally as few as possible should profit from this process.
Why?
When you accepted a job offer in the software industry, did you stipulate that your mission is to write code for your employer and you will be charging as little as possible for that privilege? Minimum wage should get you by just fine, right?
I hate fully grown adults behaving as though anyone except them making a profit is somehow evil.