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Building Tomorrow
On Innovation: Don't Ask for Permission
Tech companies are often accused of acting without first thinking through all the ramifications of what they’re doing on the principle that it is easier to ask forgiveness than permission. Adam Thierer joins the show to talk about a good habit, something he calls evasive entrepreneurialism. If innovators always waited for regulatory approval first, it would delay consumer access to transformative and even life-saving tech. Permissionless innovation in the relatively regulatory-free internet sandbox of the 1990s-2000s is what drove a great deal of tech innovation and wealth creation in Silicon Valley; the same could be true for other tech sectors in the future. Paul and Will also play a lightening round of “Overrated / Underrated” with Adam revealing a surprising love for malted beverages and the barter system.
Who are evasive entrepreneurs? Are there too many barriers to entry in the technology field? How does tech enable civil disobedience? What tech is ‘born free’? What is a regulatory risk? What is the pacing problem with technology? What is the precautionary principle? Should you intentionally diversify your twitter feed?
Further Reading:Permissionless Innovation, written by Adam Thierer
Regulatory Hacking, written by Evan Burfield and J.D. Harrison
Evasive Entrepreneurs and Permissionless Innovation, Adam Thierer and Chad Reese
The Twenty-Six Words that Created the Internet event at the Cato Institute on April 17, 2019
Related Content:Wearable Tech: Health Care of the Future, Building Tomorrow Podcast
The Right to Print Arms, Building Tomorrow Podcast
Crypto-Switzerland: Matching a Decentralized Government with a Decentralized Currency, written by Pascal Hügli
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