The Unintended Consequences of Technology. Chris Ategeka

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      The tech-state, which is synonymous with BigTech, refers to the big technology companies that have an outsized social, economic, political, and environmental impact on the world, both positive and negative. Examples of such companies include Amazon, Apple, Google, Facebook, and Microsoft. The convenience of tech offerings has made the general public numb to the dangers. And having meaningful regulation from nation-states over tech-states is difficult, due to their outsized influence and power. In many ways, these tech-states have replaced nation-states, all without the responsibilities of providing citizens with social services. This chapter explores these tech mega-powers and discusses how these new outsized forces require new oversight.

      Governments around the world are having a hard time figuring out how to regulate technology companies on issues like employee mistreatment, freedom of speech, climate change, and a myriad of other issues that are essential to humanity and our planet. Due to their transnational operations, no single government has yet cracked the code on how to keep them in check when they have so much power. These tech-state companies appear to feel as if they are almost invincible!

      Any nation-state or any government's job is to fulfill certain roles and obligations for its citizens. Those duties include:

       Protect the social and economic welfare of its citizens.

       Protect natural rights.

       Defend against external enemies.

       Manage the economic conditions and its place in the world.

       Redistribute income and resources.

       Provide public or utility goods.

      What happens when a government has less social economic and political power than the companies started and run by a handful of its citizens?

      Well, a lot is at stake!

      Performing these governing functions in the name of protecting citizens and the environment from predatory behavior becomes extremely difficult.

      When anyone is building something big, things are bound to get messy, but no one anticipated the extent at which we would experience the messiness of tech-state. As many as 9 out of 10 startups

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