Since Paul Ryan appeared on the Republican ticket, two familiar syllables have burst onto the scene like popcorn: Ayn Rand.
Like for so many others, Ayn Rand burst into my life at 19, and I lapped up her entire canon like a plate of cream. Twice. But the world has changed a lot since I fell for the ideal of hyper-individualism. It's not that the Internet Age proves she got it wrong. In fact, it shows that Ayn Rand did get a whole lot right. She said the human will is amazing and that freedom and opportunity make it flourish. Working in social technology, I see how right she was. There's a deep passion for human ingenuity in this business. Where the stakes and rewards are high, the talent is top notch and the work product is fabulous.
Yet there's another group that plays just as important a role in the Information Age: the crowd.
I can't help but wonder what Ayn Rand would have to say about the phenomenon of crowdsourcing where the work product comes from an undefined group of (pardon my language, Ayn) volunteers?
Crowdsourcing is the process of tapping the collective for ideas. Turns out, the collective offers them up like gumballs, asks little or nothing in return, and before you know it we have wonderful things like Apache Software and Wikipedia. The Internet Age shows us that what Ayn Rand would call an irrational force -- the desire to serve -- rocks! I can get Wikipedia on my iPhone in an instant for free. The Encyclopedia Britannica, before it went out of print, was cumbersome, expensive and made the book shelves sag.