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Content provided by Andreessen Horowitz, A16z crypto, Sonal Chokshi, and Chris Dixon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andreessen Horowitz, A16z crypto, Sonal Chokshi, and Chris Dixon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
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The antimemetics (and memetics) of making ideas happen -- in crypto and beyond

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Manage episode 498726734 series 3345146
Content provided by Andreessen Horowitz, A16z crypto, Sonal Chokshi, and Chris Dixon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andreessen Horowitz, A16z crypto, Sonal Chokshi, and Chris Dixon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

with @nayafia and @smc90

Ideas, memes, and vibes are some of the most important drivers of modern technology adoption, marketing, and much more -- and have been much-covered by everyone from Darwin to Dawkins to Girard to many others. Yet the topic of antimemetics -- self-censoring (vs. self-propagating) ideas -- whether something fringe, forgotten, or forbidden -- haven't been studied as much, especially in the context of modern networks.
So in this special book-launch episode, we cover the important concept of antimemetics (and memetics) -- focusing on:

  • where and how ideas take off in groups, whether in online chats or other high-shared context communities;
  • how ideas not just spread but are contained, or mutate in strange ways;
  • why packaging ideas matters; and
  • what we can all do to move ideas to action.

Where do bureacracy, institutions, and protocols come in? What about tacit knowledge that lies in these communities, how (or do) we make it explicit? What roles -- from truth tellers to champions to individual nodes in networks -- can and do people play in making something go from mere commentary to reality? After all, ideas -- or ideas as viruses -- are how movements happen, how innovation happens, how things change... or don't ever change despite being discussed all the time.

Our expert guest in this special book episode (following in our long tradition of sharing what we're reading) is Nadia Asparouhova, the author of the new book, Antimemetics: Why Some Ideas Resist Spreading; she is also the author of the book Working in Public: The Making and Maintenance of Open Source Software. a16z crypto's Sonal Chokshi -- who previously hosted Nadia's book-launch episode for the a16z Podcast and almost a decade before that on the changing culture of open source -- interviews Nadia on these themes, how they connect, and why they matter for the crypto industry and beyond. We also dig into some critiques -- and opportunities for builders -- too, including what happens to the public commons; network propagation including across networks; reality distortion fields; hidden knowledge; and cultural stagnation vs. cultural abundance. All this and more in this episode of web3 with a16z!

  continue reading

85 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 498726734 series 3345146
Content provided by Andreessen Horowitz, A16z crypto, Sonal Chokshi, and Chris Dixon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andreessen Horowitz, A16z crypto, Sonal Chokshi, and Chris Dixon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

with @nayafia and @smc90

Ideas, memes, and vibes are some of the most important drivers of modern technology adoption, marketing, and much more -- and have been much-covered by everyone from Darwin to Dawkins to Girard to many others. Yet the topic of antimemetics -- self-censoring (vs. self-propagating) ideas -- whether something fringe, forgotten, or forbidden -- haven't been studied as much, especially in the context of modern networks.
So in this special book-launch episode, we cover the important concept of antimemetics (and memetics) -- focusing on:

  • where and how ideas take off in groups, whether in online chats or other high-shared context communities;
  • how ideas not just spread but are contained, or mutate in strange ways;
  • why packaging ideas matters; and
  • what we can all do to move ideas to action.

Where do bureacracy, institutions, and protocols come in? What about tacit knowledge that lies in these communities, how (or do) we make it explicit? What roles -- from truth tellers to champions to individual nodes in networks -- can and do people play in making something go from mere commentary to reality? After all, ideas -- or ideas as viruses -- are how movements happen, how innovation happens, how things change... or don't ever change despite being discussed all the time.

Our expert guest in this special book episode (following in our long tradition of sharing what we're reading) is Nadia Asparouhova, the author of the new book, Antimemetics: Why Some Ideas Resist Spreading; she is also the author of the book Working in Public: The Making and Maintenance of Open Source Software. a16z crypto's Sonal Chokshi -- who previously hosted Nadia's book-launch episode for the a16z Podcast and almost a decade before that on the changing culture of open source -- interviews Nadia on these themes, how they connect, and why they matter for the crypto industry and beyond. We also dig into some critiques -- and opportunities for builders -- too, including what happens to the public commons; network propagation including across networks; reality distortion fields; hidden knowledge; and cultural stagnation vs. cultural abundance. All this and more in this episode of web3 with a16z!

  continue reading

85 episodes

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