Matthew Schutte

Category: Uncategorized (page 4 of 6)

An evening with Jerry Michalski and Sir Ken Robinson

I had a wonderful conversation with Jerry Michalski on our way to and from a talk by Sir Ken Robinson.  Our talks covered designing from trust, the boundaries of social organisms (communities, companies etc), digital reputation tools and the possibilities (and limits) of what they might help us accomplish and more.

The best bit of insight from the event itself came as a result of a question Jerry asked.  It was Sir Ken Robinson saying something along the lines of this:

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Chris Allen summarizes Elinor Ostrom

Christopher Allen (co-author of the SSL standard and someone who is incredibly thoughtful about collaboration) sat down today and took a crack at making Elinor Ostrom’s nobel prize winning work a bit easier to grok.

Chris and I chatted on the phone earlier today.  Then he did this.  I had a fun afternoon, but I could only wish it had been as productive as his.

I know Chris has been thinking about these things for years, but I’m certain his taking a crack at this distillation was inspired by a session at the Future of Work conference that I helped organize last week.

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My talk from Voice & Exit on Balancing Privacy and Transparency in a Digitally Connected World

This was the closing talk that I gave at Voice and Exit, in Austin, Texas last summer.  I want to thank Max Borders and Seth Blaustein for inviting me to give this talk. Distilling these complex ideas down into a deliverable form wasn’t the easiest thing for me, but it has proven incredibly helpful.

One of the details that got stripped away is the actual mechanism that keeps people behaving well in digital interactions in the future.  I’ll detail that architecture in an upcoming post, but it is a design that attempts to enable the informal pressure and flexible interpretation of traditional reputation systems to be deployed at scale and across domains by enabling users to draw upon the sources of information that they find relevant, to combine those in ways that they find useful and thus to help them make decisions about who to interact with.

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The health benefits of scary surf

mavsAirdrop

Matthew Schutte falls from the sky on a 30 foot wave at Mavericks

 

Surfer Magazine says that Big Wave Surfing is scary and stressful.  But that type of stress may in fact be good for you.

More importantly, here is the Stanford neuroscience article that inspired it.

Lucy Bernholz on Values Aligned Technology

In this thoughtful post on “Values Alligned Technology,” Lucy Bernolz has shone a spotlight on some of the fictions of consent that we have been living with for the past couple of decades.

The related question that I had grappled with over the past decade was “Which values may be shared so broadly that we should be baking them into digital architecture itself.”

Ms. Bernolz touched upon the one value that seems to be most core — actual agency for individual users. Not just lip service. Not just a fiction of consent, but actual consent. At the same time, in order to minimize the difference in transaction costs in interactions between individuals (which currently bear the full weight of making an informed decision all within a single interaction) and institutions (which can split that cost over thousands or even millions of interactions), individuals will need to be able to collaborate with others — and that ends up resulting in some form of “delegated consent.”

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Steve Waldman on CryptoEconomics and Reputation

I wasn’t able to make the recent CryptoEconomics conference organized by Kieren James-Lubin and crew but I loved this point by Steve Waldman.  There is much promise in these crypto systems, but if we tie one arm behind our back and make “identity” and “reputation” not parts of the equation – at least at times, we are unlikely to find them to be the robust tools that they have the potential to be.

His point focuses primarily on the maintenance of the ledger (which is where fraud would occur in a cryptoeconomic system).

More of Steve’s work can be found at Interfluidity

Alex Martins mini-Documentary

Redbull just released little 7 minute Webisode focused on my friend and fellow Mavericks surfer Alex Martins.

For years, I’ve admired Alex’s unique mix of patience, guts and determination.  Alex is incredibly centered, humble, hard-working and loving and it is great to see his story shared with the world with such a high degree of skill.

Enjoy!

http://www.redbull.com/us/en/surfing/stories/1331707589025/this-and-nothing-else-alex-martins-and-mavericks

The balance of exploration and execution

I’ve written a new post on balancing exploration and execution for the Lively Work blog… and had the audacity to name a ratio after myself.  Check it out here:

http://www.livelywork.com/s-ratio/

and for archival purposes, here is the text:

—-

The S Ratio: Finding the Optimal Balance of Exploration vs Execution.

For the last decade or so, I’ve spent a fair bit of time thinking about optimal structures for institutions, organizations and societies.

My thinking in these areas has largely been skewed toward an emphasis on the factors that lead to a competitive advantage. My reason for focusing on that particular question is quite simple: structures that do not lead to a competitive advantage tend Continue reading

Don’t be greedy

This clip is from about 3 years ago.  I had gotten frustrated with the crowd and had decided to lineup outside and deep.  When a big set came, I let the first wave go by (that’s the smart / safe thing to do — though it took a number of years before I gained that patience).  As the second wave began to stand up, I thought to myself, “I have this.”  I turned, paddled and then realized that the wave was filling in from the west.  With the angle of the wave, it was going to close out across the bowl.  I pulled back only to turn around and find that I had paddled myself into the absolute worst position possible — in the impact zone of the bowl — just as the largest wave of the day was rearing up.  I paddled as fast as I could at the wave, then dove off my board and swam deep once I saw the wave starting to break.

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One Wave Session

Today, Mavericks was the biggest it has been in quite some time.  Most of the best big wave surfers on the planet were out, alongside dozens of ordinary citizens like myself.

Between the crowd and the trickiness of the waves, most people had very low wave counts.  I ended up only catching one decent wave.  I was sitting closer to the channel when one of the bigger waves of the day came.

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