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The wolves of the web

Booming technology firms are now at the centre of worries about inequality

Feb 22nd 2014 | From the print edition

THE barons of high-tech like to think of themselves as very different creatures

from the barons of Wall Street. They create cool devices that let us carry the

world in our pockets. They wear hoodies, not suits. And they owe their success

to their native genius rather than to social connections they are the crazy

ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in square

holes , in Steve Jobs s famous formulation.

But for many people in San Francisco this is a distinction without a

difference. For months now protesters have been blockading the fleets of

private buses that Google and other technology giants use to ferry their

employees to and from Silicon Valley 40 miles to the south. They are

particularly incensed that the buses pay almost nothing to use public stops,

often blocking city buses. Protesters are also angry that an influx of

well-paid geeks has pushed up property prices and rents.

This resentment turned a recent awards ceremony the Crunchies, sponsored by a

website called TechCrunch into a festival of tech-bashing. Outside, protesters

held their own mock ceremony, the Crappies, with a golden toilet brush for

tax-evader of the year to Twitter s boss, Dick Costolo (a reference to a legal

but controversial tax break it got from City Hall). Inside, John Oliver, the

comedian hosting the official awards, gave the assembled billionaires a

dressing-down. You already have almost all the money in the world, he said.

Why do you need awards as well? He suggested that the next iteration of Martin

Scorsese s new film, The Wolf of Wall Street , should be set on the West Coast

with all the money, all the opulence and about 10% of the sex .

Last month Tom Perkins, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, compared critics

of the tech elite to Nazi stormtroopers on Kristallnacht thereby handing

ammunition to those who accuse that elite, of which he is a member, of being

arrogant and out of touch. Nevertheless, much of the criticism is nonsense. San

Francisco has more than its fair share of professional protesters including

those who think they have a right to live in one of the world s most desirable

places even if they can t rub two pennies together. The much-maligned private

buses are providing workers with an energy- and time-efficient alternative to

private cars. The much-abused tech money-tree is scattering riches on

lower-paid industries too. During the gold rush, Levi Strauss made a fortune by

providing the forty-niners with jeans. Modern-day equivalents will

undoubtedly make fortunes providing geeks with organic food, dress-pants sweat

pants (a cross between pyjamas and jeans, apparently), and, if one

Kickstarter-funded venture pays off, ten-year hoodies , made to last a decade.

Tech titans have also suffered from backlashes before: Bill Gates was once

vilified as a modern robber baron before he transformed himself into the world

s greatest philanthropist. Most people outside San Francisco still look on its

tech firms with admiration, not disgust. But it would be a mistake to ignore

the backlash by the bay entirely. It is being driven by two developments which

will eventually reshape attitudes across the world.

The first is the end of tech-exceptionalism. Silicon Valley s elite has always

cherished its roots in the counter-culture in the world of home-brew computer

clubs, Utopian cyber-gurus and damn-the-establishment hackers. But it also had

a conventional side: Hewlett-Packard may have been started in a garage but soon

became a corporate behemoth; tech firms links to the military establishment

were highlighted when Dave Packard became deputy secretary of defence in the

Nixon administration. The current protests symbolise a growing recognition that

tech is an industry like all others: mostly run by corporate stiffs square pegs

in square holes in Jobs s language and driven by the need to maximise profits.

Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook s chief operating officer, has become a billionaire

despite not having founded the company. Apple s success has created huge

numbers of manufacturing jobs, almost all in cheaper places than the United

States.

Some of the most savage criticisms of the tech industry are inspired by the

contrast between its self-image as a haven of hooded nonconformists and the

reality of ruthless capitalism. Valleywag, a website, pokes fun at its

affection for ostentatiously wacky corporate titles: AOL has a digital prophet,

Tumblr has a fashion evangelist and LinkedIn a hacker-in-residence. It also

exposes the Valley s addiction to politically correct consumption and

frictionless capitalism. Tesla electric cars start at $62,000. Google Glass

lets its wearers, Glassholes , consult the internet as they walk down the

street. TaskRabbit, a website, lets geeks contract out domestic chores to the

lowest bidder.

The second development is the triumph of the meritocracy. This is not to say

that tech is entirely merit-based: women and non-Asian minorities are clearly

under-represented. But its logic is nevertheless meritocratic: you can t

program a computer or develop an app without a high IQ and a specialised

education. So the tech industry is heightening the relationship between IQ,

education and reward: young tech geniuses earn many multiples of the service

workers who reply to their ads on TaskRabbit.

Succeed, then secede

Robert Reich, Bill Clinton s labour secretary and now an academic at Berkeley,

once complained about the secession of the successful , as the monied elite

moved into gated suburbs. But today s money-gorged young techies want to enjoy

the perks of city life. Thus they buy up, occupy and gentrify whole urban

districts: they are seceding in plain sight. This inevitably creates tensions

as the service class sees a parallel world being constructed before their eyes.

San Francisco has a history of anticipating cultural earthquakes, from the

hippies of the 1960s to the greenies of the 1980s. The wolves of the world wide

web should beware.