Rachel Botsman: The currency of the new economy is trust

TED
24 Sept 201219:46

Summary

TLDRThe video script explores the growing importance of reputation in the digital age, highlighting platforms like Airbnb and TaskRabbit that facilitate peer-to-peer exchanges based on trust. It showcases how individuals can become micro-entrepreneurs, leveraging their existing assets and building trust with strangers through technology. The speaker emphasizes the value of reputation as a form of social capital that can unlock opportunities and influence, potentially becoming more significant than traditional credit scores. The talk also raises questions about privacy and the aggregation of reputation data across different platforms.

Takeaways

  • ๐Ÿ  The script introduces Sebastian Sandys, an Airbnb host since 2008, who has enriched his life by hosting guests from around the world in his 18th-century watchhouse.
  • ๐Ÿฑ Sebastian bought a cat named Squeak to protect his reputation on Airbnb after a guest spotted a large mouse in his kitchen and requested a cat as a condition for not leaving a bad review.
  • ๐ŸŒ Airbnb exemplifies a peer-to-peer marketplace that matches people with space to rent with those seeking accommodations in over 192 countries, offering unique places like treehouses and castles.
  • ๐Ÿ“ˆ The rapid growth of Airbnb is illustrated through heat maps of Paris from 2008 to 2012, showing the exponential increase in hosts and the unlocking of idle capacity and value through technology.
  • ๐Ÿค Collaborative consumption is an emerging economy and culture where people become micro-entrepreneurs, empowered to make and save money from their existing assets, facilitated by building trust between strangers.
  • ๐Ÿ’ก Trust and efficiency are identified as the critical ingredients in collaborative consumption marketplaces, with personal relationships replacing empty transactions.
  • ๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿ’ผ The story of Chris Mok, a 46-year-old man known as SuperRabbit, illustrates how platforms like TaskRabbit can provide employment opportunities for those struggling to find work, with tasks ranging from household chores to assembling Ikea furniture.
  • ๐Ÿ”— The script discusses the importance of reputation in the digital age, where it is becoming more valuable than traditional credit history and can influence access to opportunities and resources.
  • ๐Ÿ”‘ Reputation is described as a measurement of community trust and is increasingly important as we engage in various online communities and marketplaces, leaving a trail of trustworthiness.
  • ๐Ÿ”ฎ The potential for a reputation dashboard is envisioned, where a person's trustworthiness across different platforms and contexts could be aggregated to form a comprehensive view of their reputation capital.
  • ๐ŸŒ The script raises important questions about digital identity, privacy, and the ownership of reputation data, as well as the challenges of aggregating and contextualizing reputation information.

Q & A

  • What is the significance of reputation in the context of the sharing economy?

    -Reputation is crucial as it serves as a measure of trust within communities, particularly in peer-to-peer marketplaces like Airbnb, where trust is built between strangers using technology.

  • How has Sebastian Sandys' life been impacted by his involvement with Airbnb?

    -Sebastian Sandys has been a bed and breakfast host on Airbnb since 2008, enriching his life by hosting guests from around the world in his 18th-century watchhouse, including adopting a cat named Squeak to protect his reputation.

  • What is the concept of collaborative consumption?

    -Collaborative consumption is an economy and culture where people share access to goods and services, often facilitated by technology, which empowers individuals to become micro-entrepreneurs and unlock the value of idle assets.

  • How does Airbnb leverage technology to build trust between users?

    -Airbnb uses technology to create a platform where users can leave reviews and ratings for each other, thus building a reputation system that fosters trust among strangers who are looking to rent or provide accommodations.

  • What is the role of TaskRabbit in the collaborative consumption marketplace?

    -TaskRabbit is a service networking platform where people can outsource tasks and vetted 'Rabbits' bid to complete them. It enables people like Chris Mok, who was unemployed, to find work and generate income.

  • How does the reputation system on TaskRabbit work?

    -TaskRabbit uses a rigorous interview process to vet 'Rabbits'. Users post tasks with a price, and Rabbits bid on them. Reputation is built through ratings and reviews, with higher reputations increasing the chances of winning bids and the rates they can charge.

  • What is the potential impact of reputation capital on traditional credit scoring?

    -Reputation capital, which reflects an individual's trustworthiness across various communities and marketplaces, could become more powerful than traditional credit history, potentially influencing access to services and opportunities.

  • How does the reputation system in platforms like Airbnb and TaskRabbit empower individuals?

    -These systems allow individuals to build a reputation based on their interactions and services provided. A good reputation can lead to more business opportunities, higher earnings, and a sense of personal power and validation.

  • What are some of the challenges associated with aggregating reputation data from different platforms?

    -Challenges include ensuring that the data is accurate and relevant, respecting privacy and transparency concerns, and determining how to weigh different types of reputation data in a meaningful way.

  • How does the script suggest the future of reputation in the digital age?

    -The script envisions a future where reputation data is aggregated in real-time across various platforms, creating a comprehensive 'reputation dashboard' that could influence economic and social opportunities.

  • What is the potential broader impact of reputation-based systems on society?

    -Reputation-based systems could lead to a positive disruption in power dynamics, trust, and influence, potentially making reputation a more significant socioeconomic factor than traditional credit scores.

Outlines

00:00

๐Ÿ  The Power of Reputation in the Sharing Economy

This paragraph introduces the concept of reputation as a valuable asset, particularly in the context of the sharing economy. Sebastian Sandys, an Airbnb host since 2008, shares his experience of how hosting guests globally has enriched his life. His story illustrates the importance of maintaining a good reputation, as evidenced by his decision to adopt a cat named Squeak to prevent a bad review. The paragraph also explains how Airbnb operates as a peer-to-peer marketplace, offering a wide range of unique accommodations and tapping into the collaborative consumption economy. This movement is characterized by technology-enabled trust-building between strangers, which is crucial for the success of such platforms.

05:01

๐Ÿค Collaborative Consumption and the Rise of Trust

The second paragraph delves into the transformative impact of collaborative consumption on traditional supply and demand models. It highlights how technology enhances the efficiency and trust necessary for sharing to occur, with platforms like TaskRabbit exemplifying this shift. TaskRabbit, founded by Leah Busque, allows users to outsource tasks to 'Rabbits' who bid on running errands. The platform's success hinges on trust, which is built through a rigorous vetting process and user ratings. Chris Mok, a former Macy's art buyer turned 'SuperRabbit,' leverages his high reputation on the platform to secure more and better-paying tasks, demonstrating the tangible value of reputation in the gig economy.

10:03

๐Ÿ” The Importance and Challenges of Reputation Data

This paragraph discusses the significance of reputation data in the digital age, where every interaction leaves a trail that contributes to one's trustworthiness. It emphasizes the volume of reputation data generated through various platforms and the challenges of aggregating this information across different contexts. The speaker raises questions about ownership and portability of reputation data, suggesting that individuals should be able to carry their reputation from one platform to another. The paragraph also touches on the contextual nature of reputation and the need for smart aggregation to capture an accurate picture of a person's trustworthiness.

15:04

๐Ÿš€ The Future of Reputation Capital and Its Broader Implications

The final paragraph envisions a future where reputation capital is as significant, if not more so, than traditional credit scores. It suggests that reputation will become a key determinant of access to resources and opportunities. The speaker discusses the potential for reputation data to disrupt traditional recruiting methods, as seen with Stack Overflow, where programmers' reputation scores can lead to better job opportunities. The paragraph concludes by positioning the collaborative revolution as a significant socioeconomic shift, akin to the Industrial Revolution, and posits that trust networks and reputation capital will redefine wealth, markets, power, and personal identity in the 21st century.

Mindmap

Keywords

๐Ÿ’กReputation

Reputation refers to the overall opinion or evaluation of a person's or entity's character and actions, often based on past experiences and interactions. In the video's context, reputation is portrayed as a valuable asset, especially in the age of collaborative consumption. It is highlighted through the story of Sebastian Sandys, who bought a cat to protect his reputation on Airbnb, and through the concept of reputation capital, which is likened to a currency that will be more powerful than credit history in the 21st century.

๐Ÿ’กCollaborative Consumption

Collaborative consumption is an economic and cultural system where people share access to goods and services, facilitated by technology. The video discusses how this system empowers individuals like micro-entrepreneurs to make and save money from their existing assets. Examples include platforms such as Airbnb, which matches hosts with guests, and TaskRabbit, which connects people who need errands run with 'Rabbits' who perform these tasks for pay.

๐Ÿ’กAirbnb

Airbnb is a peer-to-peer marketplace that allows individuals to rent out their spaces to travelers in over 192 countries. The platform is highlighted in the video as an example of how technology creates new marketplaces for previously unmarketable assets like unique accommodations. It also underscores the importance of trust and reputation in such marketplaces, as hosts and guests rely on each other's reviews and ratings.

๐Ÿ’กMicro-Entrepreneurs

Micro-entrepreneurs are individuals who engage in small-scale entrepreneurial activities, often leveraging their personal resources or assets. In the video, Sebastian Sandys is an example of a micro-entrepreneur, as he hosts guests in his 18th-century watchhouse through Airbnb, turning his personal space into a source of income.

๐Ÿ’กTaskRabbit

TaskRabbit is a platform that connects people who need tasks done with 'Rabbits' who are willing to perform these tasks for a fee. The video uses TaskRabbit to illustrate the concept of service networking, where online relationships are used to facilitate real-world errands and tasks, and how it can provide employment opportunities for people like Chris Mok, who became a 'SuperRabbit' after losing his job.

๐Ÿ’กTrust

Trust is a fundamental component of collaborative consumption platforms, as it enables strangers to engage in transactions and interactions safely. The video emphasizes the role of technology in building trust between users, as seen in Airbnb's community where hosts and guests rely on each other's reputations, and in TaskRabbit's rigorous vetting process for 'Rabbits'.

๐Ÿ’กReputation Capital

Reputation capital is the concept of one's reputation having tangible value across various communities and marketplaces. The video discusses how reputation capital could become a more significant determinant of access and opportunity than traditional credit history. It is exemplified by Chris Mok's rise to 'SuperRabbit' status, which increased his chances of winning bids and charging more.

๐Ÿ’กStack Overflow

Stack Overflow is a platform where programmers can ask and answer technical questions, earning reputation based on the quality of their contributions. The video uses Stack Overflow as an example of how reputation generated in one online community can have value beyond that environment, with users including their reputation scores on resumes and recruiters using the platform to find talent.

๐Ÿ’กService Networking

Service networking is the idea of using online relationships to get things done in the real world. The term is introduced in the context of TaskRabbit, where users can outsource tasks to 'Rabbits' who bid on the opportunity to complete them. This concept highlights the intersection of digital platforms and real-world services.

๐Ÿ’กDigital Identities

Digital identities refer to the online representation of a person's identity, which can include their behaviors, interactions, and reputation across various digital platforms. The video raises questions about ensuring that digital identities accurately reflect real-world identities and how they can be used to build trust in online marketplaces.

๐Ÿ’กEconomic Activity

Economic activity in the context of the video refers to the various ways individuals engage in commerce and trade within collaborative consumption platforms. The video discusses how platforms like TaskRabbit and Airbnb give people control over their economic activities by allowing them to monetize their assets and skills.

Highlights

Reputation will become profoundly important as a valuable asset in the age of technology.

Sebastian Sandys' life was changed by Airbnb, becoming a micro-entrepreneur and host to over 50 guests from around the world.

Airbnb's peer-to-peer marketplace matches people with space to rent with those seeking accommodation in 192 countries.

Technology is creating markets for unique spaces like treehouses and castles, revolutionizing traditional accommodation options.

Collaborative consumption is an emerging economy and culture where people unlock the value of idle assets.

Airbnb's growth in Paris is illustrated through heat maps showing the rapid increase in host properties from 2008 to 2012.

Collaborative consumption marketplaces like Airbnb rely on building trust between strangers facilitated by technology.

Sebastian's experience during the London riots highlights the personal connections and community formed through such marketplaces.

Collaborative consumption is about empowerment and making meaningful connections, moving beyond mere transactions.

Examples like Airbnb, Kickstarter, and Etsy are built on personal relationships and are part of a shift towards knowing the Joneses.

Technology advancements increase the efficiency and trust in sharing, making it easier and more prevalent.

Chris Mok, aka SuperRabbit, found employment through TaskRabbit after losing his job, illustrating the power of service networking.

TaskRabbit allows people to outsource tasks, with vetted 'Rabbits' bidding to complete them, creating a new labor force.

Reputation is becoming a critical measure of trust in peer-to-peer marketplaces, with implications beyond traditional credit scores.

Reputation data is growing exponentially with platforms like Airbnb, Carpooling.com, and peer-to-peer lending sites.

The aggregation of reputation data across different platforms is a significant challenge and opportunity.

Individuals should have ownership and control over their reputation data, which can travel with them across communities.

Reputation is contextual and its aggregation requires smart data selection to reflect a person's trustworthiness accurately.

The future may involve a real-time stream of reputation data, creating a comprehensive dashboard of one's reputation capital.

Startups are exploring ways to aggregate, monitor, and utilize online reputation, indicating a shift towards a reputation economy.

Reputation capital could disrupt traditional power structures, making it more valuable than credit history in determining trust and influence.

Reputation data from platforms like Stack Overflow is transforming recruitment processes, making resumes seem outdated.

The collaborative revolution is set to be as significant as the Industrial Revolution, redefining wealth, markets, and personal identity.

Transcripts

play00:00

Translator: Joseph Geni Reviewer: Morton Bast

play00:15

So if someone asked you

play00:17

for the three words that would sum up

play00:20

your reputation, what would you say?

play00:23

How would people describe your judgment,

play00:26

your knowledge, your behaviors, in different situations?

play00:30

Today I'd like to explore with you

play00:32

why the answer to this question

play00:34

will become profoundly important

play00:36

in an age where reputation will be your most valuable asset.

play00:40

I'd like to start by introducing you to someone

play00:43

whose life has been changed by a marketplace

play00:47

fueled by reputation.

play00:49

Sebastian Sandys has been a bed and breakfast host

play00:52

on Airbnb since 2008.

play00:54

I caught up with him recently, where, over the course

play00:57

of several cups of tea, he told me how

play01:00

hosting guests from all over the world

play01:03

has enriched his life.

play01:04

More than 50 people have come to stay in the 18th-century

play01:07

watchhouse he lives in with his cat, Squeak.

play01:10

Now, I mention Squeak because Sebastian's first guest

play01:15

happened to see a rather large mouse run across the kitchen,

play01:19

and she promised that she would refrain from leaving

play01:21

a bad review on one condition: he got a cat.

play01:25

And so Sebastian bought Squeak to protect his reputation.

play01:29

Now, as many of you know, Airbnb is a peer-to-peer

play01:32

marketplace that matches people who have space to rent

play01:36

with people who are looking for a place to stay

play01:39

in over 192 countries.

play01:41

The places being rented out are things that you might

play01:44

expect, like spare rooms and holiday homes,

play01:47

but part of the magic is the unique places

play01:50

that you can now access: treehouses, teepees,

play01:53

airplane hangars, igloos.

play01:56

If you don't like the hotel, there's a castle down the road

play01:59

that you can rent for 5,000 dollars a night.

play02:02

It's a fantastic example of how technology

play02:05

is creating a market

play02:07

for things that never had a marketplace before.

play02:09

Now let me show you these heat maps of Paris

play02:13

to see how insanely fast it's growing.

play02:15

This image here is from 2008.

play02:18

The pink dots represent host properties.

play02:21

Even four years ago, letting strangers stay in your home

play02:25

seemed like a crazy idea.

play02:28

Now the same view in 2010.

play02:30

And now, 2012.

play02:33

There is an Airbnb host on almost every main street in Paris.

play02:38

Now, what's happening here is people are realizing

play02:43

the power of technology to unlock the idling capacity

play02:47

and value of all kinds of assets,

play02:50

from skills to spaces to material possessions,

play02:53

in ways and on a scale never possible before.

play02:57

It's an economy and culture called collaborative consumption,

play03:00

and, through it, people like Sebastian

play03:03

are becoming micro-entrepreneurs.

play03:05

They're empowered to make money and save money

play03:08

from their existing assets.

play03:10

But the real magic and the secret source behind

play03:13

collaborative consumption marketplaces like Airbnb

play03:16

isn't the inventory or the money.

play03:18

It's using the power of technology to build trust

play03:22

between strangers.

play03:23

This side of Airbnb really hit home to Sebastian last summer

play03:27

during the London riots.

play03:28

He woke up around 9, and he checked his email

play03:31

and he saw a bunch of messages all asking him

play03:34

if he was okay.

play03:36

Former guests from around the world had seen that

play03:38

the riots were happening just down the street, and wanted

play03:40

to check if he needed anything.

play03:42

Sebastian actually said to me, he said, "Thirteen former guests

play03:45

contacted me before my own mother rang." (Laughter)

play03:50

Now, this little anecdote gets to the heart of why

play03:54

I'm really passionate about collaborative consumption,

play03:57

and why, after I finished my book, I decided

play03:59

I'm going to try and spread this into a global movement.

play04:03

Because at its core, it's about empowerment.

play04:07

It's about empowering people to make meaningful connections,

play04:11

connections that are enabling us to rediscover

play04:14

a humanness that we've lost somewhere along the way,

play04:17

by engaging in marketplaces like Airbnb, like Kickstarter,

play04:21

like Etsy, that are built on personal relationships

play04:25

versus empty transactions.

play04:28

Now the irony is that these ideas are actually taking us back

play04:31

to old market principles and collaborative behaviors

play04:34

that are hard-wired in all of us.

play04:36

They're just being reinvented in ways that are relevant

play04:39

for the Facebook age.

play04:40

We're literally beginning to realize that we have wired

play04:44

our world to share, swap, rent, barter or trade

play04:48

just about anything. We're sharing our cars on WhipCar,

play04:52

our bikes on Spinlister, our offices on Loosecubes,

play04:55

our gardens on Landshare. We're lending and borrowing

play04:58

money from strangers on Zopa and Lending Club.

play05:01

We are trading lessons on everything from sushi-making

play05:03

to coding on Skillshare,

play05:05

and we're even sharing our pets on DogVacay.

play05:09

Now welcome to the wonderful world of collaborative consumption

play05:13

that's enabling us to match wants with haves

play05:17

in more democratic ways.

play05:19

Now, collaborative consumption is creating the start

play05:22

of a transformation in the way we think about supply and demand,

play05:26

but it's also a part of a massive value shift underway,

play05:30

where instead of consuming to keep up with the Joneses,

play05:33

people are consuming to get to know the Joneses.

play05:36

But the key reason why it's taking off now so fast

play05:41

is because every new advancement of technology

play05:44

increases the efficiency and the social glue of trust

play05:48

to make sharing easier and easier.

play05:51

Now, I've looked at thousands of these marketplaces,

play05:54

and trust and efficiency are always the critical ingredients.

play05:59

Let me give you an example.

play06:01

Meet 46-year-old Chris Mok, who has, I bet,

play06:05

the best job title here of SuperRabbit.

play06:09

Now, four years ago, Chris lost his job, unfortunately,

play06:13

as an art buyer at Macy's, and like so many people,

play06:17

he struggled to find a new one during the recession.

play06:19

And then he happened to stumble across a post about

play06:23

TaskRabbit.

play06:24

Now, the story behind TaskRabbit starts like so many

play06:28

great stories with a very cute dog by the name of Kobe.

play06:32

Now what happened was, in February 2008,

play06:35

Leah and her husband were waiting for a cab to take them

play06:38

out for dinner, when Kobe came trotting up to them

play06:41

and he was salivating with saliva.

play06:43

They realized they'd run out of dog food.

play06:46

Kevin had to cancel the cab and trudge out in the snow.

play06:49

Now, later that evening, the two self-confessed tech geeks

play06:53

starting talking about how cool it would be if some kind of

play06:56

eBay for errands existed.

play06:59

Six months later, Leah quit her job,

play07:01

and TaskRabbit was born.

play07:04

At the time, she didn't realize that she was actually hitting

play07:08

on a bigger idea she later called service networking.

play07:12

It's essentially about how we use our online relationships

play07:16

to get things done in the real world.

play07:19

Now the way TaskRabbit works is, people outsource

play07:22

the tasks that they want doing, name the price

play07:24

they're willing to pay, and then vetted Rabbits

play07:27

bid to run the errand.

play07:28

Yes, there's actually a four-stage, rigorous interview process

play07:33

that's designed to find the people that would make

play07:35

great personal assistants and weed out the dodgy Rabbits.

play07:38

Now, there's over 4,000 Rabbits across the United States

play07:43

and 5,000 more on the waiting list.

play07:46

Now the tasks being posted are things that you might

play07:49

expect, like help with household chores

play07:52

or doing some supermarket runs.

play07:55

I actually learned the other day that 12 and a half thousand

play07:57

loads of laundry have been cleaned and folded

play08:01

through TaskRabbit.

play08:02

But I love that the number one task posted,

play08:06

over a hundred times a day, is something that many of us

play08:09

have felt the pain of doing:

play08:12

yes, assembling Ikea furniture. (Laughter) (Applause)

play08:18

It's brilliant. Now, we may laugh, but Chris here

play08:22

is actually making up to 5,000 dollars a month

play08:25

running errands around his life.

play08:28

And 70 percent of this new labor force

play08:31

were previously unemployed or underemployed.

play08:35

I think TaskRabbit and other examples of collaborative consumption

play08:38

are like lemonade stands on steroids. They're just brilliant.

play08:41

Now, when you think about it, it's amazing, right,

play08:45

that over the past 20 years, we've evolved

play08:49

from trusting people online to share information

play08:52

to trusting to handing over our credit card information,

play08:55

and now we're entering the third trust wave:

play08:58

connecting trustworthy strangers to create all kinds

play09:02

of people-powered marketplaces.

play09:05

I actually came across this fascinating study

play09:06

by the Pew Center this week that revealed

play09:09

that an active Facebook user is three times as likely

play09:12

as a non-Internet user to believe that most people are trustworthy.

play09:17

Virtual trust will transform the way we trust one another

play09:22

face to face.

play09:23

Now, with all of my optimism, and I am an optimist,

play09:26

comes a healthy dose of caution, or rather, an urgent need

play09:30

to address some pressing, complex questions.

play09:35

How to ensure our digital identities reflect our

play09:37

real world identities? Do we want them to be the same?

play09:41

How do we mimic the way trust is built face-to-face online?

play09:44

How do we stop people who've behaved badly

play09:46

in one community doing so under a different guise?

play09:50

In a similar way that companies often use some kind of

play09:53

credit rating to decide whether to give you a mobile plan,

play09:56

or the rate of a mortgage, marketplaces that depend

play09:59

on transactions between relative strangers

play10:02

need some kind of device to let you know that Sebastian

play10:05

and Chris are good eggs,

play10:07

and that device is reputation.

play10:10

Reputation is the measurement of how much a community trusts you.

play10:15

Let's just take a look at Chris.

play10:17

You can see that over 200 people have given him

play10:20

an average rating over 4.99 out of 5.

play10:23

There are over 20 pages of reviews of his work

play10:26

describing him as super-friendly and fast,

play10:28

and he's reached level 25, the highest level,

play10:32

making him a SuperRabbit.

play10:34

Now โ€” (Laughter) -- I love that word, SuperRabbit.

play10:37

And interestingly, what Chris has noted is that as his reputation

play10:40

has gone up, so has his chances of winning a bid

play10:43

and how much he can charge.

play10:45

In other words, for SuperRabbits, reputation

play10:48

has a real world value.

play10:50

Now, I know what you might be thinking.

play10:52

Well, this isn't anything new. Just think of power sellers

play10:55

on eBay or star ratings on Amazon.

play10:58

The difference today is that, with every trade we make,

play11:02

comment we leave, person we flag, badge we earn,

play11:05

we leave a reputation trail

play11:07

of how well we can and can't be trusted.

play11:10

And it's not just the breadth but the volume

play11:13

of reputation data out there that is staggering.

play11:16

Just consider this: Five million nights have been booked

play11:19

on Airbnb in the past six months alone.

play11:22

30 million rides have been shared on Carpooling.com.

play11:26

This year, two billion dollars worth of loans

play11:29

will go through peer-to-peer lending platforms.

play11:31

This adds up to millions of pieces of reputation data

play11:35

on how well we behave or misbehave.

play11:39

Now, capturing and correlating the trails of information

play11:42

that we leave in different places is a massive challenge,

play11:46

but one we're being asked to figure out.

play11:48

What the likes of Sebastian are starting to rightfully ask

play11:52

is, shouldn't they own their reputation data?

play11:54

Shouldn't the reputation that he's personally invested

play11:57

on building on Airbnb mean that it should travel with him

play12:01

from one community to another?

play12:03

What I mean by this is, say he started selling second-hand

play12:06

books on Amazon. Why should he have to start from scratch?

play12:09

It's a bit like when I moved from New York to Sydney.

play12:13

It was ridiculous. I couldn't get a mobile phone plan

play12:16

because my credit history didn't travel with me.

play12:20

I was essentially a ghost in the system.

play12:23

Now I'm not suggesting that the next stage

play12:26

of the reputation economy is about

play12:28

adding up multiple ratings into some kind of empty score.

play12:32

People's lives are too complex, and who wants to do that?

play12:36

I also want to be clear that this isn't about adding up

play12:38

tweets and likes and friends in a Klout-like fashion.

play12:42

Those guys are measuring influence, not behaviors

play12:45

that indicate our trustworthiness.

play12:47

But the most important thing that we have to keep in mind

play12:50

is that reputation is largely contextual.

play12:54

Just because Sebastian is a wonderful host

play12:57

does not mean that he can assemble Ikea furniture.

play13:01

The big challenge is figuring out what data

play13:04

makes sense to pull, because the future's

play13:07

going to be driven by a smart aggregation of reputation,

play13:11

not a single algorithm.

play13:13

It's only a matter of time before we'll be able to perform

play13:17

a Facebook- or Google-like search

play13:20

and see a complete picture of someone's behaviors

play13:22

in different contexts over time.

play13:25

I envision a realtime stream of who has trusted you,

play13:29

when, where and why, your reliability on TaskRabbit,

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your cleanliness as a guest on Airbnb,

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the knowledge that you display on Quora or Tripovo,

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they'll all live together in one place,

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and this will live in some kind of reputation dashboard

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that will paint a picture of your reputation capital.

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Now this is a concept that I'm currently researching

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and writing my next book on, and currently define

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as the worth of your reputation, your intentions,

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capabilities and values across communities and marketplaces.

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This isn't some far-off frontier.

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There are actually a wave of startups like Connect.Me

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and Legit and TrustCloud that are figuring out how

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you can aggregate, monitor and use your online reputation.

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Now, I realize that this concept may sound a little

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Big Brother to some of you, and yes, there are some

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enormous transparency and privacy issues to solve,

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but ultimately, if we can collect our personal reputation,

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we can actually control it more, and extract

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the immense value that will flow from it.

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Also, more so than our credit history,

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we can actually shape our reputation.

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Just think of Sebastian

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and how he bought the cat to influence his.

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Now privacy issues aside, the other really interesting issue

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I'm looking at is how do we empower digital ghosts,

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people [who] for whatever reason, are not active online,

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but are some of the most trustworthy people in the world?

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How do we take their contributions to their jobs,

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their communities and their families,

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and convert that value into reputation capital?

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Ultimately, when we get it right, reputation capital

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could create a massive positive disruption

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in who has power, trust and influence.

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A three-digit score, your traditional credit history,

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that only 30 percent of us actually know what it is,

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will no longer be the determining factor

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in how much things cost, what we can access,

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and, in many instances, limit what we can do in the world.

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Indeed, reputation is a currency that I believe will become

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more powerful than our credit history in the 21st century.

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Reputation will be the currency that says

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that you can trust me.

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Now the interesting thing is, reputation

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is the socioeconomic lubricant

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that makes collaborative consumption work and scale,

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but the sources it will be generated from,

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and its applications, are far bigger than this space alone.

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Let me give you one example from the world of recruiting,

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where reputation data will make the rรฉsumรฉ seem

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like an archaic relic of the past.

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Four years ago, tech bloggers and entrepreneurs

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Joel Spolsky and Jeff Atwood, decided to start something

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called Stack Overflow.

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Now, Stack Overflow is basically a platform where

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experienced programmers can ask

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other good programmers highly detailed technical questions

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on things like tiny pixels and chrome extensions.

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This site receives five and a half thousand questions a day,

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and 80 percent of these receive accurate answers.

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Now users earn reputation in a whole range of ways,

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but it's basically by convincing their peers

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they know what they're talking about.

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Now a few months after this site launched, the founders

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heard about something interesting,

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and it actually didn't surprise them.

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What they heard was that users were putting

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their reputation scores on the top of their rรฉsumรฉs,

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and that recruiters were searching the platform

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to find people with unique talents.

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Now thousands of programmers today are finding

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better jobs this way, because Stack Overflow

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and the reputation dashboards provide a priceless window

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into how someone really behaves,

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and what their peers think of them.

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But the bigger principle of what's happening behind Stack Overflow,

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I think, is incredibly exciting.

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People are starting to realize that the reputation

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they generate in one place has value

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beyond the environments from which it was built.

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You know, it's very interesting.

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When you talk to super-users, whether that's SuperRabbits

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or super-people on Stack Overflow, or Uberhosts,

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they all talk about how having a high reputation

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unlocks a sense of their own power.

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On Stack Overflow, it creates a level playing field,

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enabling the people with the real talent to rise to the top.

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On Airbnb, the people often become more important

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than the spaces. On TaskRabbit,

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it gives people control of their economic activity.

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Now at the end of my tea with Sebastian, he told me how,

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on a bad, rainy day, when he hasn't had a customer

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in his bookstore, he thinks of all the people around

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the world who've said something wonderful about him,

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and what that says about him as a person.

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He's turning 50 this year, and he's convinced

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that the rich tapestry of reputation he's built on Airbnb

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will lead him to doing something interesting

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with the rest of his life.

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You know, there are only a few windows in history

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where the opportunity exists to reinvent

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part of how our socioeconomic system works.

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We're living through one of those moments.

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I believe that we are at the start of a collaborative revolution

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that will be as significant as the Industrial Revolution.

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In the 20th century, the invention of traditional credit

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transformed our consumer system, and in many ways

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controlled who had access to what.

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In the 21st century, new trust networks,

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and the reputation capital they generate, will reinvent

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the way we think about wealth, markets, power

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and personal identity, in ways we can't yet even imagine.

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Thank you very much. (Applause)

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(Applause)

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Related Tags
Reputation EconomyCollaborative ConsumptionAirbnb HostMarketplace TrustDigital IdentitySocial NetworksTaskRabbitPeer-to-PeerOnline ReviewsTech Innovation