RT @jilliancyork: Perhaps the reason so many bad Silicon Valley ideas come from white men is because it's a white men's club

RT @jilliancyork: Perhaps the reason so many bad Silicon Valley ideas come from white men is because it's a white men's club
RT @RYBn_: Silicon Army, Thibault Henneton, Le Monde diplomatique, avril
RT @Info_Activism: One of the most respected venture capitalists in Silicon Valley is now a Trump delegate cc @Ono…
RT @quentingirard: Dans le dernier Simpson, double hommage à la Grèce et Wikileaks et critique de la Silicon Pas
San Francisco's degree of income inequality has also increased, to levels roughly on par with Madagascar. Of the 150 largest regions in the US, the Bay Area ranked 45th for income inequality in 1979. Now we've jumped to No. 14. Across the US, income inequality has risen steadily since 1979, but in about 1999, the Bay Area's rate of increase surpassed the nation's average.
Defense Secretary Ashton Carter is making a big play for Silicon Valley startups and tech innovators that so far have shown little to no interest in working with the Pentagon. To show its seriousness about engaging Silicon Valley, the Defense Department will stand up a permanent office there called “defense innovation unit experimental” — the first time the Pentagon will have a full-time outreach presence in the Valley. It will be staffed by civilian and military officials, including reservists with private-sector experience. Carter also is proposing a pilot program to invest in startup ventures under the CIA’s existing In-Q-Tel technology incubator. According to a senior defense official, the Pentagon will make “small investments” in promising technologies in areas like electronics, software and automation.
Google, Apple and Facebook are highly profitable and look likely to remain so. Still, a New Yorker looking up at the Pan Am, Chrysler and General Motors buildings might recall, wistfully, that the same must once have been said of those fallen titans, too.
For reasons both personal and business, Silicon Valley isn’t just empowering drugs—it could possibly be empowered by them.
Some of the biggest names in technology have been making the pilgrimage to the desert for years, happily blending in unnoticed. These include Larry Page and Sergey Brin, the Google founders, and Jeff Bezos, chief executive of Amazon. But now a new set of younger rich techies are heading east, including Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, employees from Twitter, Zynga and Uber, and a slew of khaki-wearing venture capitalists.
billionaire:'Technology increases the wealth gap' @arthackday