Buchzusammenfassung
Jeff Stibel is a brain scientist and entrepreneur. He is CEO of the Dun & Bradstreet Credibility Corp and currently serves on the boards of the Brown University Entrepreneurship Program and the University of Southern California’s Innovation Institute.
Networks, whether biological like ant colonies or technological like the internet, follow a three-phase lifecycle: growth, breakpoint, and equilibrium. Growth begins with gradual expansion, often accelerating rapidly as resources are maximized, as seen in the human brain’s prenatal development of 250,000 cells per minute. Eventually, unchecked growth reaches a breakpoint, where further expansion becomes detrimental. This threshold, often identified only after being surpassed, prompts a pruning process—such as overcrowded ant colonies sending fertile ants to establish new colonies. Finally, networks stabilize at equilibrium, adjusting to an optimal size dictated by environmental needs, like a sea slug’s minimal neurons versus a cat’s trillion. The internet mirrors this trajectory, with explosive growth from zero websites in 1993 to 600 million by 2012. However, its saturation has led to challenges, including declining user engagement and significant energy demands, projected to reach 20 percent of global consumption. To endure, the internet must transition to equilibrium, prioritizing efficiency and meaningful contributions over unchecked expansion.
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