{"id":202270,"date":"2015-10-23T07:41:47","date_gmt":"2015-10-23T11:41:47","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/whats-next-top-trends-diary-of-an-accidental-futurist.php"},"modified":"2015-10-23T07:41:47","modified_gmt":"2015-10-23T11:41:47","slug":"whats-next-top-trends-diary-of-an-accidental-futurist","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/futurist\/whats-next-top-trends-diary-of-an-accidental-futurist.php","title":{"rendered":"What&#8217;s Next: Top Trends | Diary of an accidental futurist &#8230;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    Heres my re-write of the chapter on money again. I must stress    that this is now going into an edit process so it will come out    looking slightly different. Quite a bit of material got dumped    (which really hurts when you like it). Otherwise it was a    matter of better signposting, starting with the economy and    then moving into money and constantly teasing out the digital.    Sorry about the layout, its gone rather haywire. (BTW, Ive    added a few links, which obviously wont appear in any paper    versions of this chapter).  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    The Economy and Money: Is digital money making us more    careless?    The idea of the future being different from the present is    so repugnant to our conventional modes of thought and behaviour    that we, most of us, offer a great resistance to acting on its    practice. John Maynard Keynes, economist    Networks of inequality    A few years ago I was walking down a street in West London when    a white van glided to a halt opposite. Four men stepped out and    slowly slid what looked like a giant glass coffin from the    rear. Inside it was a large shark.  <\/p>\n<p>    The sight of a live shark in London was slightly surreal, so I    sauntered over to ask what was going on. It transpired that the    creature in question was being installed in an underground    aquarium in the basement of a house in Notting Hill. This    secret subterranean lair should, I suppose, have belonged to Dr    Evil. To local residents opposing deep basement developments it    probably did. A more likely candidate might have been someone    benefiting from the digitally networked nature of global    finance. A partner at Goldman Sachs, perhaps. This is the    investment bank immortalised by Rolling Stone magazine as: a    great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity. Or    possibly the owner was the trader known as the London Whale,    who lost close to six billion dollars in 2012 for his employer,    JP Morgan, by electronically betting on a series of highly    risky and somewhat shady derivatives known as Credit Default    Swaps.    London real estate had become a serious place to stash funny    money, so maybe the house belonged to a slippery individual    dipping their fingers into the bank accounts of a corrupt    foreign government or international institution. In the words    of William Gibson, the former sci-fi writer, London is: Where    you go if you successfully rip off your third world nation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Whichever ruthless predator the house belonged to, something    fishy was underfoot. My suspicion was that it had to do with    unchecked financial liberalisation, but also how the digital    revolution was turning the economy into a winner-takes-all    online casino.    The shift of power away from locally organised labour to    globally organised capital has been occurring for a while, but    the recent digital revolution has accelerated and accentuated    this. Digitalisation hasnt directly enabled globalisation, but    it certainly hasnt restrained it either and one of its    negative side effects has been a tendency toward polarisation,    both in terms of individual incomes and market monopolies.  <\/p>\n<p>    Throughout most of modern history, around two-thirds of the    money made in developed countries was typically paid as wages.    The remaining third was paid as interest, dividends or other    forms of rent to the owners of capital. But since 2000, the    amount paid to capital has increased substantially while that    paid to labour has declined, meaning that real wages have    remained flat or fallen for large numbers of people.  <\/p>\n<p>    The shift toward capital could have an innocent analogue    explanation. China, home to an abundant supply of low-cost    labour, has pushed wages down globally. This situation could    soon reverse, as China runs out of people to move to its    cities, their pool of labour shrinks, due to ageing, and    Chinese wages increase. Alternatively, low-cost labour may    shift somewhere else  possibly Africa. But another explanation    for the weakened position of human labour is that humans are no    longer competing against each other, but against a range of    largely unseen digital systems. It is humans that are losing    out. A future challenge for governments globally will therefore    be the allocation of resources (and perhaps taxes) between    people and machines given that automated systems will take on    an increasing number of previously human roles and    responsibilities.  <\/p>\n<p>    Same as it ever was?    Ever since the invention of the wheel weve used machines to    supplement our natural abilities. This has always displaced    certain human skills. And for every increase in productivity    and living standards thereve been downsides. Fire cooks our    food and keeps us warm, but it can burn down our houses and    fuel our enemys weapons. During the first industrial    revolution machines further enhanced human muscle and then we    outsourced further dirty and dangerous jobs to machines. More    recently weve used machines to supplement our thinking by    using them for tedious or repetitive tasks.    Whats different now is that digital technologies, ranging from    advanced robotics and sensor networks to basic forms of    artificial intelligence and autonomous systems, are threatening    areas where human activity or input was previously thought    essential or unassailable.In particular, software and    algorithms with near-zero marginal cost are now being used for    higher-order cognitive tasks. This is not digital technology    being used alongside humans, but as an alternative to them.    This is not digital and human. This is digital instead of    human.    Losing an unskilled job to an expensive machine is one thing,    but if highly skilled jobs are lost to cheap software where    does that leave us? What skills do the majority of humans have    left to sell if machines and automated systems start to think?    You might be feeling pretty smug about this because you believe    that your job is somehow special or terribly difficult to do,    but the chances are that you are wrong, especially when you    take into account whats happening to the cost and processing    power of computers. Its not so much what computers are capable    of now, but what they could be capable of in ten or twenty    years time that you should be worried about.  <\/p>\n<p>    I remember ten or so years ago reading that if you index the    cost of robots to humans with 1990 as the base (1990=100) the    cost of robots had fallen from 100 to 18.5. In contrast, the    cost of people had risen to 151. Der Spiegel, a German    magazine, recently reported that the cost of factory automation    relative to human labour had fallen by 50 per cent since    1990.    Over the shorter term there wont be much to worry about. Even    over the longer term therell still be jobs that idiot savant    software wont be able to do very well  or do at all. But    unless we wake up to the fact that were training people to    compete head on with machine intelligence theres going to be    trouble eventually. This is because we are filling peoples    heads with knowledge thats applied according to sets of rules,    which is exactly what computers do. We should be teaching    people to do things that these machines cannot. We should be    teaching people to constantly ask questions, find fluid    problems, think creatively and act empathetically. We should be    teaching high abstract reasoning, lateral thinking and    interpersonal skills. If we dont a robot may one day come    along with the same cognitive skills as us, but costs just    $999. Thats not $999 a month, thats $999 in total. Forever.    No lunch breaks, holidays, childcare, sick pay or strike    action, either. How would you compete with that?  <\/p>\n<p>    If you think thats far fetched, Foxconn, a Chinese electronics    assembly company, is designing a factory in Chengdu thats        totally automated  no human workers involved whatsoever.    Im fairly sure well eventually have factories and machines    that can replicate themselves too, including software that    writes its own code and 3D printers that can print other    3D-printers. Once weve invented machines that are smarter than    us there is no reason to suppose that these machines wont go    on to invent their own machines  which we then wont be able    to understand  and so on ad infinitum. Lets hope these    machines are nice to us.    Its funny that our obsessive compulsive     addiction to machines, especially mobile devices, is    currently undermining our interpersonal skills and eroding our    abstract reasoning and creativity, when these skills are    exactly what well need to compete against the machines.    But who ever said that the future couldnt be deeply    ironic.    There are more optimistic outcomes of course. Perhaps the    productivity gains created by these new technologies will    eventually show up and the resulting wealth will be more fairly    shared. Perhaps therell be huge cost savings made in    healthcare or education. Technologically induced productivity    gains may offset ageing populations and shrinking workforces    too. Its highly unlikely that humans will stop having    interpersonal and social needs and even more unlikely that the    delivery of all these needs will be within the reach of robots.    In the shorter term its also worth recalling an insightful    comment attributed to NASA in 1965, which is that: Man is the    lowest-cost, all-purpose computer system which can be    mass-produced by unskilled labour. But if the rewards of    digitalisation are not equitable or designers decide that human    agency is dispensable or unprofitable then a bleaker future may    emerge, one characterised by polarisation, alienation and    discomfort.    Money for nothing  <\/p>\n<p>    Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple, once responded to demands that    Apple raise its return to shareholders by saying that his aim    was not to make more profit. His aim was to make better    products, from which greater financial returns would flow. This    makes perfect sense to anyone except speculators carelessly    seeking short-term financial gains at the expense of broader    measures of benefit or value. As Jack Welch, the former CEO of    General Electric once said: Shareholder value is the dumbest    idea in the world.    It was Plato who pointed out that an appetite for more could be    directly linked with bad human behaviour. This led Aristotle to    draw a black and white distinction between the making of things    and the making of money. Both philosophers would no doubt have    been disillusioned with high frequency trading algorithms     algorithms being computer programs that follow certain steps to    solve a problem or react to an observed situation. In 2013,    algorithms traded $28 million worth of shares in 15    milliseconds after Reuters released manufacturing data    milliseconds early. Doubtless money was made here, but for    doing what?  <\/p>\n<p>    Charles Handy, the contemporary philosopher, makes a similar    point in his book The Second Curve that when money becomes the    point of something then something goes wrong. Money is merely a    secure way to hold or transmit value (or frozen desire as    someone more poetically put it). Money is inherently valueless    unless exchanged for something else. But the aim of many    digital companies appears to be to make money by selling    themselves (or their users) to someone else. Beyond this their    ambition appears to be market disruption by delivering    something faster or more conveniently than before. But to what    end ultimately? What is their great purpose? What are they for    beyond saving time and delivering customers to advertisers?    In this context, high frequency trading is certainly clever,    but its socially useless. It doesnt make anything other than    money for small number of individuals. Moreover, while the    risks to the owners of the algorithms are almost non-existent,    this is not generally the case for the society as a whole. Huge    profits are privatised, but huge losses tend to be    socialised.    Connectivity has multiple benefits, but linking things together    means that any risks are linked with the result that systemic    failure is a distinct possibility. So far weve been lucky.    Flash Crashes such as the one that occurred on 6 May 2010 have    been isolated events. On this date high-speed trading    algorithms decided to sell vast amounts of stocks in seconds,    causing momentary panic. Our blind faith in the power and    infallibility of algorithms makes such failures more likely and    more severe. As Christopher Steiner, author of Automate: How    Algorithms Came to Rule Or World writes: Were already halfway    towards a world where algorithms run nearly everything. As    their power intensifies, wealth will concentrate towards them.    Similarly, Nicholas Carr has written that: Miscalculations of    risk, exacerbated by high-speed computerised trading programs,    played a major role in the near meltdown of the worlds    financial system in 2008. Digitalisation helped to create the    sub-prime mortgage market and expanded it at a reckless rate.    But negative network effects meant that the market imploded    with astonishing speed, partly because financial networks were    able to spread panic as easily as they had been able to    transmit debt. Network effects can create communities and    markets very quickly, but they can destroy them with velocity    and ferocity too. Given the worlds financial markets, which    influence our savings and pensions, are increasingly influenced    by algorithms, this is a major cause for concern. After all,    who is analysing the algorithms that are doing all of the    analysing?  <\/p>\n<p>    Out of sight and out of mind    Interestingly, its been shown that individuals spend more    money when they use digital or electronic money rather than    physical cash. Because digital money is somehow invisible or    out of sight our spending is less considered or careful. And    when money belongs to someone else, a remote institution rather    than a known individual for instance, any recklessness and    impulsiveness is amplified. Susan Greenfield, the    neuroscientist, has even gone as far as to link the 2008    financial crisis to digitalisation because digitalisation    creates a mindset of disposability. If, as a trader, you have    grown up playing rapid-fire computer games in digital    environments you may decide that similar thrills can be    achieved via trading screens without any direct real-world    consequences.    You can become desensitised. Looking at numbers on a screen    its easy to forget that these numbers represent money and    ultimately people. Having no contact with either can be    consequential. Putting controls on computers can make matters    worse because we tend to take less notice of information when    its delivered on a screen amid a deluge of other digital    distractions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Carelessness can have other consequences too. Large basement    developments such as the one I stumbled into represent more    than additional living space. They are symbolic of a gap thats    opening up between narcissistic individuals who believe that    they can do anything they want if they can afford it and others    who are attempting to hang on to some semblance of physical    community. A wealthy few even take pleasure seeing how many    local residents they can upset, as though it were some kind of    glorious computer game. Of course, in the midst of endless    downward drilling and horizontal hammering, the many have one    thing that the few will never have, which is enough.    Across central London, where a large house can easily cost ten    million pounds, it is not unusual for basement developments to    include underground car parks, gyms, swimming pools and staff    quarters, although the latter are technically illegal. Its    fine to stick one of natures most evolved killing creatures 50    feet underground, but local councils draw a line in the sand    with Philippino nannies.    The argument for downward development is centred on the primacy    of the individual in modern society. Its their money (digital    or otherwise) and they should be allowed to do whatever they    like with it. There isnt even a need to apologise to    neighbours about the extended noise, dirt and inconvenience.    The argument against such developments is that its everyone    elses sanity and that neighbourhoods and social cohesion rely    on shared interests and some level of civility and    cooperation.    If people start to build private cinemas with giant digital    screens in basements this means they arent frequenting public    spaces such as local cinemas, which in turn impacts on the    vitality of the area. In other words, an absence of reasonable    restraint and humility by a handful of self-centred vulgarians    limits the choices enjoyed by the broader community. This isnt    totally the fault of digitalisation, far from it, but the idea    that an individual can and should be left alone to do or say    what they like is being amplified by digital technology. This    is similar, in some respects, to the way in which being seated    securely inside a car seems to bring out the worst in some    drivers behaviour toward other road users. Access to    technology, especially technology thats personal and mobile,    facilitates remoteness, which in turn reduces the need to    interact physically or consider the feelings of other human    beings. Remote access, in particular, can destroy human    intimacy and connection, although on the plus side such    technology can be used to expose or shame individuals that do    wrong in the eyes of the broader community.  <\/p>\n<p>    In ancient Rome there was a law called Lex Sumptuaria that    restrained public displays of wealth and curbed the purchasing    of luxury goods. Similar sumptuary laws aimed at superficiality    and excess have existed in ancient Greece, China, Japan and    Britain. Perhaps its time to bring these laws back  or at    least to levy different rates of tax or opprobrium on immodest    or socially divisive consumption or on digital products that    damage the cohesiveness of the broader physical community.    Income polarisation and inequality arent new. Emile Zola, the    French writer, referred to rivers of money: Corrupting    everyone in a fever of speculation in mid-19th Century Paris.    But could it be that a fever of digital activity is similarly    corrupting? Could virtualisation and personalisation be fraying    the physical bonds that make us human and ultimately hold    society together? Whats especially worrying here is that    studies suggest that wealth beyond a certain level erodes    empathy for other human beings. Perhaps the shift from physical    to digital interaction and exchange is doing much the same    thing.    But its not just the wealthy that are withdrawing physically.    Various apps are leading to what some commentators are calling    the shut in economy. This is a spin-off from the on-demand    economy, whereby busy people, including those that work from    home, are not burdened by household chores. But perhaps hardly    ever venturing outside is as damaging as physically shutting    others out. As one food delivery service, Door Dash,    cryptically says: Never leave home again.    Where have all the jobs gone?    Id like to move on to consider some other aspects of digital    exchange, but before I do Id like to dig a little deeper into    the question of whether computers and automated systems are    creating or destroying wealth and what happens to any humans    that become irrelevant to the needs of the on-demand digital    economy.  <\/p>\n<p>    The digitally networked nature of markets is making some people    rich, but also spreading wealth around far more than you might    think. Globally, the level of inequality between nations is    lessening and so too is extreme poverty. In 1990, for example,    43 per cent of people in emerging markets lived in extreme    poverty, defined as existing on less than $1 per day. By 2010,    this figure had shrunk to 21 per cent. Or consider China. In    2000, around 4 per cent of Chinese households were defined as    middle class. By 2012, this had increased to two-thirds and by    2022, its predicted that almost half (45%) of the Chinese    population will be middle class, defined as having annual    household incomes of between US $9,000 and $16,000. This has    more to do with demographics and deregulation than    digitalisation, but by accident or design global poverty has    been reduced by half in 20 years. Nevertheless, the gap between    the highest and lowest earning members of society is growing    and is set to continue with the onward march of digital    networks. As the novelist Jonathan Franzen says: The internet    itself is in an incredibly elitist concentrator of wealth in    the hands of the few while giving the appearance of voice and    the appearance of democracy to people who are in fact being    exploited by the technologies.    If you have something that the world feels it needs right now    its now possible to make an awful lot of money very quickly,    especially if the need can be transmitted digitally. However,    the spoils of regulatory and technological change are largely    being accrued by people who are highly educated and    internationally minded. If you are neither of these things then    you are potentially destined for low-paid, insecure work,    although at least youll have instant access to free music,    movie downloads and computer games to pass the time until you    die.    Theres been much discussion about new jobs being invented,    including jobs we cant currently comprehend, but most current    jobs are fairly routine and repetitive and therefore ripe for    automation. Furthermore, its unrealistic to expect that    millions of people can be quickly retrained and reassigned to    do jobs that are beyond the reach of robots, virtualisation and    automation. Losing a few thousand jobs in car manufacturing to    industrial robots or Amazon wiping out a bookshop is one thing,    but what happens if automation removes vast swathes of    employment across the globe? What if half of all jobs were to    disappear? Moreover, if machines do most of the work how will    most people acquire enough money to pay for the things that the    machines make, thereby keeping the machines in employment?    Maybe we should tax robots instead of people?  <\/p>\n<p>    In theory the internet should be creating jobs. In the US    between 1996 and 2005 it looked like it might. Productivity    increased by around 3 per cent and unemployment fell. But by    2005 (i.e. before the global recession) this started to    reverse. Why might this be so? According to McKinsey &    Company, a firm of consultants, computers and related    electronics, information industries and manufacturing    contributed about 50 per cent of US productivity increases    since 2000 but reduced (US) employment by 4,500,000 jobs.    Perhaps productivity gains will take time to come. This is a    common claim of techno-optimists and the authors of the book,    Race Against the Machine. Looking at the first industrial    revolution, especially the upheavals brought about by the great    inventions of the Victorian era, they could have a point.    But it could be that new technology, for all its power, cant    compete with simple demographics and sovereign debt. Perhaps,    for all its glitz, computing just isnt as transformative as    stream power, railroads, electricity, postage stamps, the    telegraph or the automobile. Yes weve got Facebook, Snapchat    and Rich Cats    of Instagram, but we havent set foot on the moon since    1969 and traffic in many cities moves no faster today than it    did 100 years ago. It is certainly difficult to argue against    certain aspects of technological change. Between 1988 and 2003,    for example, the effectiveness of computers increased a    staggering 43,000,000-fold. Exponentials of this nature must be    creating tectonic shifts somewhere, but where exactly?  <\/p>\n<p>    Is efficiency a good measure of value?    In its heyday, in 1955, General Motors employed 600,000 people.    Today, Google, a similarly iconic American company, employs    around 50,000. Facebook employs about 6,000. More dramatically,    when Facebook bought Instagram for $1 billion in 2012,    Instagram had 30,000,000 users, but employed just 13 people    full time. At the time of writing, Whatsapp had just 55    employees, but a market value exceeding that of the entire Sony    Corporation. This forced Robert Reich, a former US treasury    Secretary, to describe Whatsapp as: everything thats wrong    with the US economy. This isnt because the company is bad     its because it doesnt create jobs. Another example is Amazon.    For each million dollars of revenue that Amazon makes it    employs roughly one person. This is undoubtedly efficient, but    is it desirable? Is it progress? These are all examples of the    dematerialisation of the global economy, where we dont need as    many people to produce things, especially when digital products    and services have a near zero marginal cost and where customers    can be co-opted as free click-workers that dont appear on any    balance sheet.    A handful of people are making lots of money from this and when    regulatory frameworks are weak or almost non-existent and    geography becomes irrelevant these sums tend to multiply. For    multinational firms making money is becoming easier too, not    only because markets are growing, but because huge amounts of    money can be saved by using information technology to    co-ordinate production and people across geographies.    Technology vs. psychology    If a society can be judged by how it treats those with the    least then things are not looking good. Five minutes walk from    the solitary shark and winner takes all mentality you can find    families that havent worked in three generations. Many of them    have given up hope of ever doing so. They are irrelevant to a    digital economy or, more specifically, what Manuel Castells, a    professor of sociology at the University of California at    Berkeley, calls informational capitalism.    Similarly, Japan is not far off a situation where some people    will retire without ever having worked and without having moved    out of the parental home. In some ways Japan is unique, for    instance its resistance to immigration. But in other ways Japan    offers a glimpse of what can happen when a demographic    double-whammy of rapid ageing and falling fertility means that    workforces shrink, pensions become unaffordable and younger    generations dont enjoy the same dreams, disposable incomes or    standards of living as their parents.    Economic uncertainty and geo-political volatility, caused    partly by a shift from analogue to digital platforms, can mean    that careers are delayed, which delays marriage, which feeds    through to low birth rates, which lowers GDP, which fuels more    economic uncertainty. This is all deeply theoretical, but the    results can be hugely human. If people dont enjoy secure    employment, housing or relationships, what does this do to    their physical and especially psychological state? I expect    that a negative psychological shift could be the next big thing    we experience unless a coherent we emerges to challenge some    of the more negative aspects of not only income inequality, but    the lack of secure and meaningful work for the less talented,    the less skilled and less fortunate.    A few decades ago people worked in a wide range of    manufacturing and service industries and collected a secure    salary and benefits. But now, according to Yochai Benkler, a    professor at Harvard Law School, the on-demand digital economy    is efficiently connecting people selling certain skills to    others looking to buy. This sounds good. It sounds    entrepreneurial. It sounds efficient and flexible and is    perhaps an example of labour starting to develop its own    capital. But its also, potentially, an example of mass    consumption decoupling from large-scale employment and of the    fact that unrestrained free-markets can be savagely    uncompromising.    Of course, unlike machines, people can vote and they can revolt    too, although I think that passive disaffection and    disenfranchisement are more likely. One of the great benefits    of the internet has been the ease with which ideas can be    transmitted across the globe, but ideas dont always turn into    actions. The transmission of too much data or what might be    termed too much truth is also resulting in what Castells    calls: informed bewilderment. This may sound mild, but if    bewilderment turns into despair and isolation theres a chance    this could feed into fundamentalism, especially when the    internet is so efficient at hosting communities of anger and    transmitting hatred.    There is also evidence emerging that enduring physical hardship    and mental anguish not only create premature ageing, which    compromises the immune and cardiovascular system, but that this    has a lasting legacy for those people having children. This is    partly because poorer individuals are more attuned to    injustice, which feeds through to ill health and premature    ageing, and partly because many of the subsequent diseases can    be passed on genetically. But perhaps its not relative income    levels per se that so offend, but the fact that its now so    easy to see what you havent got. Social media spreads images    of excess abundantly and exuberantly. Sites such as Instagram    elicit envy and distribute depression by allowing selfies to    scream: look at me! (and my oh so perfect life). Its all a    lie, of course, but we dont really notice this because the    internet so easily becomes a prison of belief.  <\/p>\n<p>    A narrowing of focus    In the Victorian era, when wealth was polarised, there was at    least a shared moral code, broad sense of civic duty and    collective responsibility. People, you might say, remained    human. Nowadays, increasingly, individuals are looking out for    themselves and digitalisation, true to form, is oiling the    wheels of efficiency here too.    Individualism has created a culture thats becoming    increasingly venal, vindictive and avaricious. This isnt just    true in the West. In China there is anguished discussion about    individual callousness and an emergent culture of compensation.    The debate was initiated back in 2011 when a toddler, Yue Yue, was    hit by several vehicles in Foshan, a rapidly growing city in    Guangdong province, and a video of the event was posted online.    Despite being clearly hurt no vehicles stopped and nobody    bothered to help until a rubbish collector picked the child up.    Yue Yue later died in hospital. Another incident, also in    China, saw two boys attempting to save two girls from drowning.    The boys failed and were made to pay compensation of around    50,000 Yuan (about 5,000) each to the parents for not saving    them.    Such incidents are rare, but they are not unknown and do    perhaps point toward a world that is becoming more interested    in money than mankind  a world that is grasping and litigious,    where trust and the principle of moral reciprocity are under    threat. You can argue that we are only aware of such events due    to digital connectivity, which is probably true, and that both    sharing and volunteering are in good health. But you can also    argue that the transparency conjured up by connectivity and    social media is making people more nervous about sticking their    necks out. In a word with no secrets, ubiquitous monitoring and    perfect remembering people have a tendency to conform. Hence we    click on petitions online rather than actually doing anything.    I was innocently eating my breakfast recently when I noticed    that Kelloggs were in partnership with Chime for Change, an    organisation committed to raise funds and awareness for girls    education and empowerment through projects promoting education,    health and justice. How were Kelloggs supporting this? By    asking people to share a selfie to show your support. To me    this is an example of internet impatience and faux familiarity.    It personifies the way that the internet encourages ephemeral    acts of belonging that are actually nothing of the sort.    As for philanthropy, theres a lot of it around, but much of it    has become, as one Museum director rather succinctly put it:    money laundering for the soul. Philanthropy is becoming an    offshoot of personal branding. It is buildings as giant    selfies, rather than the selfless or anonymous love of    humanity. One pleasing development that may offset this trend    is crowd-funding, whereby individuals fund specific ideas with    micro-donations. At the moment this is largely confined to    inventions and the odd artistic endeavour, but theres no    reason why crowds of people with small donations cant fund    political or altruistic ideas or even interesting individuals    with a promising future.    I sometimes wonder why we havent seen a new round of    revolutions in the West. Due to digital media we all know all    about the haves and the have yachts. Its even easy to find out    where the yachts are moored thanks to free tracking apps. Then    again, we barely know our own neighbours these days, living, as    we increasingly do, in digital bubbles where friends and news    stories are filtered according to pre-selected criteria.    The result is that we know more and more about the people and    things we like, but less and less about anything, or anyone,    outside of our existing preferences and prejudices.    Putting aside cognitative biases such as inattentional    blindness, which means we are often blissfully unaware of    whats happening in front of our own eyes, theres also the    thought that weve become so focussed on ourselves that    focusing anger on a stranger five minutes up the road  or on a    distant yacht  is a bit of stretch. This is especially true if    you are addicted to 140 character updates of your daily    existence or looking at photographs of cute cats online.    Mugged by reality    Is anyone out there thinking about how Marxs theory of    alienation might be linked to social stratification and an    erosion of humanity? I doubt it, but the fall of Communism can    be connected with the dominance of individualism and the    emergence of self-obsession.    This is because before the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989    there was an alternative ideology and economic system that    acted as a counter-weight to the excesses of capitalism, free    markets and individualism. Similarly, in many countries, an    agile and attentive left took the sting out of any political    right hooks. Then in the 1990s there was a dream called the    internet. But the internet is fast becoming another ad-riddled    venue for capitalism where, according to an early Facebook    engineer (quoted by Ashlee Vance in his biography of Elon Musk)    the best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make    people click ads. The early dream of digital democracy has    also soured because it turns out that a complete democracy of    expression attracts voices that are stupid, angry and have a    lot of time on their hands. This is a Jonathan Franzen again,    although he reminds me of another writer, Terry Prachett, who    pointed out that: real stupidity beats artificial intelligence    every time.    To get back to the story in hand, the point here is that if you    take away any balancing forces you not only end up with tax shy    billionaires, but income polarisation and casino banking. You    can also end up with systemic financial crashes, another of    which will undoubtedly be along shortly, thanks to our    stratospheric levels of debt, the globally connected nature of    risk and the corruption and villainy endemic in emerging    markets. Its possible that connectivity will create calm    rather than continued volatility, but I doubt it. More likely a    relatively insignificant event, such as a modest rise in US    interest rates, will spread panic and emotional contagion at    which point anyone still living in a digital bubble will get    mugged by reality.    Coming back to some good news, a significant economic trend is    the growth of global incomes. This sounds at odds with    declining real wages, but I am talking about emerging not    developed markets. According to Ernst & Young, the    accountancy firm, an additional 3 billion individuals are being    added to the global middle class. Thats 3 billion more    smart-phone using, FitBit wearing, Linked-in profiled, Apple    iCar driving, Instagram obsessives.    In China, living standards have risen by an astonishing 10,000    per cent in a single generation. In terms of per capita GDP in    China and India this has doubled in 16 and 12 years    respectively. In the UK this took 153 years. This is pleasing,    although the definition of middle class includes people earning    as little as $10 a day. Many of these people also live behind    the Great Firewall of China, so we shouldnt get too carried    away with trickle down economics or the opening up of    democracy. What globalisation giveth to jobs automation may    soon be taketh away too and many may find themselves sinking    downward towards working class or neo-feudal status rather than    effervescently rising upward.    According to Pew Research, the percentage of people in the US    that think of themselves as middle class fell from 53 per cent    in 2008 to 44 per cent in 2014, with 40 per cent now defining    themselves as lower class compared to 25 per cent in 2008.    Teachers, for example, that have studied hard, worked    relentlessly and benefit society as a whole find themselves    priced out of real-estate and various socio-economic    classifications by the relentless rise of financial    speculators. Deeper automation and virtualisation could make    things worse. Martin Wolf, a Financial Times columnist,    comments that intelligent machines could hollow out middle    class jobs and compound inequality.    Even if the newfound global wealth isnt temporary theres    plenty of research to suggest that as people grow richer they    focus more attention on their own needs at the expense of    others. So a wealthier world may turn out to be one thats less    caring.    Of course, its not numbers that matter. What counts are    feelings, especially feelings related to the direction of    travel. The perception in the West generally is that we are    mostly moving in the wrong direction. This can be seen in areas    such as education and health and its not too hard to imagine a    future world split into two halves, a thin, rich,    well-educated, mobile elite and an overweight, poorly educated,    anchored underclass. This is reminiscent of HG Wells    intellectual, surface dwelling Eloi and downtrodden,    subterranean Morlocks in The Time Machine and Tolkiens Mines    of Moria. The only difference this time might be that its the    global rich that end up living underground, cocooned from the    outside world in deep basement developments.    An upside to the downside    Its obviously possible that this outcome is re-written. Its    entirely possible that we will experience a reversal where    honour, spiritual service or courage to country are valued far    above commerce. This is a situation that existed in Britain and    elsewhere not that long ago. Its possible that grace,    humility, public spiritedness and contempt for vulgar displays    of wealth could become dominant social values. Or perhaps a    modest desire to leave as small a footprint as possible could    become a key driving force.    On the other hand, perhaps a dark dose of gloom and doom is    exactly what the world needs. Perhaps the era of cheap money is    coming to an end and an extended period of slow growth will do    us all a world a good. A study led by Heejung Park at UCLA    found that the trend towards greater materialism and reduced    empathy had been partly reversed due to the 2008-2010 economic    downturn. In comparison with a similar study looking at the    period 20042006, US adolescents were less concerned with    owning expensive items, while the importance of having a job    thats worthwhile to society rose. Whether this is just    cyclical or part of a permanent shift is currently impossible    to say.    These studies partly link with previous research suggesting    that a decline in economic wealth promotes collectivism and    perhaps with the idea that we only truly appreciate things when    we are faced with their loss. There arent too many upsides to    global pandemics, rogue asteroids and financial meltdowns, but    the threat of impending death or disaster does focus the long    lens of perspective, as Steve Jobs pointed out in his commencement    speech at Stamford University.    Digital Vs Physical trust    Thats enough about the economy. How might the digitalisation    of money impact our everyday behaviour in the future? I think    it is still too early to make any definitive statements about    particular technologies or applications, but I do believe that    the extinction of cash is inevitable because digital    transactions are faster and more convenient, especially for    companies. Cash can be cumbersome too. Its also because    governments and bureaucracies would like to reduce illegal    economic activity and collect the largest amount of tax    possible thereby increasing their power.    In the US, for instance, its been estimated that cash costs    the American economy $200 billion a year, not just due to tax    evasion and theft, but also due to time wasting. A study, by    Tufts University says that the average American spends 28    minutes per month traveling to ATMs, to which my reaction is so    what? What are people not doing by wasting 28 minutes going    to an ATM? Writing sonnets? Inventing a cure for cancer?    But a wholly cashless society, or global e-currency, wont    happen for a long time, partly because physical money,    especially banknotes, is so tied up with notions of national    identity (just look at the Euro to see how that can go wrong!).    Physical money tells a rich story. It symbolises a nations    heritage in a way that digital payments cannot. People in    recent years have also tended to trust cash more. The physical    presence of cash is deeply reassuring, especially in times of    economic turmoil.    In the UK, in 2012, more than half of all transactions were    cash and the use of banknotes and coins rose slightly from the    previous year. Why? The answer is probably that in 2012 the UK    was still belt-tightening and people felt they could control    their spending more easily using cash. Or perhaps people didnt    trust the banks or each other. Similarly, in most rich    countries, more than 90 per cent of all retail is still in    physical rather than digital stores. We should also be careful    not to assume that everyone is like ourselves. The people most    likely to use cash are elderly, poor or vulnerable, so it would    be a huge banking error, in my view, if everyone stopped    accepting physical money. Its also a useful Plan B to have a    stash of cash in case the economy melts down or your phone    battery dies leaving you with no way to pay for dinner. This is    probably swimming against the tide though and I suspect there    is huge pent-up demand for mobile and automated payments.    Globally cash is still king (85% of all transactions are still    cash according to one recent study) but in developed economies    this tends not to be the case. In the US about 60% of    transactions are now digital, while in the UK non-cash payments    have now overtaken physical cash. Money will clearly be made    trying to get rid of physical money. According to the UK    payments council the use of cash is expected to fall by a third    by 2022. Nevertheless, circumstances do change and I suspect    that any uptake of new payment technologies is scenario    dependent.    I was on the Greek island of Hydra in 2014 and much to my    surprise the entire economy had reverted to physical money.    This was slightly annoying, because I had just written a blog    post about the death of cash based on my experience of visiting    the island two years earlier. On this visit almost everywhere    accepted electronic payments, but things had dramatically    changed. Again, why? I initially thought the reason was Greeks    attempting to avoid tax. Cash is anonymous. But it transpired    that the real reason was trust. If you are a small business    supplying meat to a taverna and youre worried about getting    paid, you ask for cash. This is one reason why cash might    endure longer than some e-evangelists tell us. Cash is a hugely    convenient method to store and exchange value and has the    distinct advantage of keeping our purchasing private. If we    exchange physical cash for digital currency this makes it    easier for companies and governments to spy on what were    doing.  <\/p>\n<p>    Countless types of cashless transactions    There are many varieties of digital money. Weve had credit    cards for a very long time. Transactions using cards have been    digital for ages and contactless for a while. Weve grown used    to private currencies, virtual currencies, micro-payments,    embedded value cards, micro-payments and contactless (NFC)    payments. Weve also learnt to trust PayPal and various    Peer-to-Peer lending sites such as Zopa and Prosper, although    one suspects that, like ATMs, we are happier taking money out    than putting money in. Were also slowly getting used to the    idea of payments using mobile phones. There are even a few    e-exhibitionists with currency chips embedded in their own    bodies and while this might take a while to catch on I can see    the value in carrying around money in our bodies. A chip    inserted in your jaw or arm is a bit extreme, but how about a    tiny e-pill loaded with digital cash that, once swallowed, is    good for $500 or about a week? Theres even digital gold, but    to be honest I cant get my head around that at all. The key    point here is that all of these methods of transaction are more    or less unseen. They are also fast and convenient, which, I    would suggest, means that spending will be more impulsive and    less considered. We will have regular statements detailing our    digital transactions, of course, but these will also be    digital, delivered to our screens amid a deluge of other    digital distractions and therefore widely ignored or not    properly read.  <\/p>\n<p>    Really thinking or mindlessly consuming?    What interests me most here is whether or not attitudes and    behaviours change in the presence of invisible money. There is    surprisingly little research on this subject, but what does    exist, along with my own experience, suggests that once we    shift from physical to digital money things do change.    With physical money (paper money, metal coins and cheques) we    are more likely to buy into the illusion that money has    inherent value. We are therefore more vigilant. In many cases,    certainly my own, we are more careful. In short we think.    Physical money feels real so our purchasing (and debt) is more    considered. With digital money (everything from credit and    debit cards to PayPal, Apple Money, iTunes vouchers, loyalty    points and so forth) our spending is more impulsive. And as I    said, earlier, when money is digital and belongs to someone    else any careless behaviour is amplified.    Quantitative Easing (QE) is perhaps a similar story. If instead    of pressing a key on a computer and sending digital money to a    secondary market to buy financial assets including bonds we saw    fleets of trucks outside central banks being loaded with piles    of real money to do the same I suspect that our reaction would    be wholly different. We might even question whether a    government monetising (buying) its own debt is a sensible idea    given that the 2008 financial meltdown was caused by the    transmission and obfuscation of debt.    Of course, pumping money into assets via QE circles back to    create inequality. If you own hard assets, such as real estate,    then any price increases created by QE can be a good thing    because it increases the value of your assets (often bought    with debt, which is reduced via inflation). In contrast savers    holding cash, or anyone without assets, is penalised.    Its a bit of a stretch to link QE to the Arab Spring, but some    people have, pointing out that food price inflation was a    contributory factor, which can be indirectly linked to QEs    effects on commodities. If one was a conspiracy theorist one    might even suggest that QEs real aim was to drive down the    value of the dollar, the pound and the Euro at the expense of    spiralling hard currency debt and emerging economy    currencies.    Im getting back into macro-economics, which I dont want to    do, but its worth pointing out that in The Downfall of Money,    the author Frederick Taylor notes that Germanys hyperinflation    not only destroyed the middle class, but democracy itself. As    he writes, by the time inflation reached its zenith: everyone    wanted a dictatorship.    The cause of Germanys hyperinflation was initially Germany    failing to keep up with payments due to France after WW1. But    it was also caused by too much money chasing too few goods,    which has shades of asset bubbles created by QE.    It was depression, not inflation per se, that pushed voters    toward Hitler, but this has a familiar ring. Across Europe we    are seeing a significant rightwards shift and one of the main    reasons why Germany wont boost the EU economy is because of    the lasting trauma caused by inflation ninety years ago. If a    lasting legacy of QE, debt, networked risk and a lack of    financial restraint by individuals and institutions, all    accentuated by digitalisation, is either high inflation or    continued depression things could get nasty, in which case we    might all long for the return of cash as a relatively safe and    private way to endure the storm.    Crypto-currency accounts    The idea of a global digital economy thats free from dishonest    banks, avaricious speculators and regulation-fixated    governments is becoming increasingly popular, especially, as    youd expect, online. Currencies around the world are still    largely anchored to the idea of geographical boundaries and    economies in which physical goods and services are exchanged.    But what if someone invented a decentralised digital currency    that operated independently of central banks? And what if that    currency were to use encryption techniques, not only to ensure    security and avoid confiscation or taxation, but to control the    production of the currency? A crypto-currency like BitCoin    perhaps?  <\/p>\n<p>    In one scenario, BitCoin could become not only an alternative    currency, but a stateless alternative payments infrastructure,    competing against the like of Apple Pay and PayPal and against    alternative currencies like airline miles. But theres a more    radical possibility.    What if a country got into trouble (Greece? Italy? Argentina?)    and trust in the national currency collapsed. People might seek    alternative ways to make payments or keep their money safe. If    enough people flocked to something like BitCoin a government    might be forced to follow suit and wed end up with a    crytocurrency being used for exports, with its value tied to a    particular economy or set of economies.    More radically, how about a currency that rewarded certain    kinds of behaviour? We have this already, in a sense, with    loyalty cards, but Im thinking of something more    consequential. What if the underlying infrastructure of BitCoin    was used to create a currency that was distributed to people    behaving in a virtuous manner? What if, for instance, money    could be earned by putting more energy or water into a local    network than was taken out? Or how about earning money by    abstaining from the development of triple sub-basements or by    visiting an elderly person that lives alone and asking them how    they are? We could even pay people who smiled at strangers    using eye-tracking and facial recognition technology on Apple    smart glasses or Google eye-contact lenses.    Given what governments would potentially be able to see and do    if cash does disappear, such alternative currencies  along    with old-fashioned bartering  could prove popular. At the    moment, central banks use interest rates as the main weapon to    control or stimulate the economy. But if people hoard cash    because interest rates are low  or because they dont trust    banks  then the economy is stunted. But with a cashless    society the government has another weapon in its arsenal.    What if banks not only charged people for holding money    (negative interest rates) but governments imposed an additional    levy for not spending it? This is making my head spin so we    should move on to explore the brave new world of healthcare and    medicine, of which money is an enabler. But before we do Id    like to take a brief look at pensions and taxation and then end    on considering whether the likes of Mark Zuckerberg might    actually be OK really.    If economic conditions are good, Id imagine that money and    payments will continue to migrate toward digital formats.    Alternatives to banks will spring up and governments will    loosen their tax-take. However, if austerity persists, or    returns, then governments will do everything they can to get    hold of more of your money  but they will be less inclined to    spend it, especially on services. Taxation based upon income    and expenditure will continue, but I expect that it will also    shift towards assets and wealth and to a very real extent    individual behaviour.    One of the effects of moving toward digital payments and    connectivity is transparency. Governments will, in theory, be    able to see what youre spending your money on, but also how    youre living in a broader sense. Hence stealth taxation. Have    you put the wrong type of plastic in the recycling bin again?    Thats a fine (tax). Kids late for school again? Fine (tax).    Burger and large fries again? You get the idea Governments    will seek to not only maximise revenue, but nudge people toward    certain allegedly virtuous behaviours and people will be forced    to pay for the tiniest transgressions. This, no doubt, will    spark rage and rebellion, but theyll be a tax for that    too.    As for pensions, there are several plausible scenarios, but    business as usual doesnt appear to be one of them. The system    is a pyramid-selling scheme thats largely bust and needs to be    reinvented in many countries. 1 in 7 people in the UK has no    retirement savings whatsoever, for instance, and the culture of    instant digital gratification would suggest that trying to get    people to save a little for later wont meet with much    success.    What comes next largely depends on whether the culture of now    persists and whether or not responsibility for the future is    shared individually or collectively. If the culture of    individualism and instant rewards holds firm, well end up with    a very low safety net or a situation where people never fully    retire. If we are able to delay gratification, well end up    either with a return to a savings culture or one where the    state provides significant support in return for significant    contributions. The bottom line here is that pensions are set    firmly in the future and while we like thinking about the    future we dont like paying for it. So what might happen that    could change the world for the better and make things slightly    more sustainable?  <\/p>\n<p>    An economy if people still matter    In 1973, the economist EF Schumachers book Small is Beautiful    warned against the dangers of gigantism. On one level the    book was a pessimistic polemic about modernity in general and    globalisation in particular. On the other hand it was possibly    prescient and predictive. Schumacher foresaw the problem of    resource constraints and foreshadowed the issue of human    happiness, which he believed could not be sated by material    possessions.    He also argued for human satisfaction and pleasure to be    central to all work, mirroring the thoughts of William Morris    and the Arts and Crafts Movement. They argued that since    consumer demand was such a central driver of the economy, then    one way to change the world for the better would be to change    what the majority of people want, which links directly back    into money and our current voracious appetite for material    possessions.    On one level Schumachers book is still an idealistic hippy    homily. On another it manages to describe our enduring desire    for human scale, human relationships and technology that is    appropriate, controllable and above all understandable.    Physical money encourages the physical interaction of people,    whereas digital cash is more hands off and remote. Digital    transactions require energy and while any desire for green    computing wont exactly stop the idea of a cashless society in    its tracks it may yet restrain it.    There are already some weak signals around this, which    Schumacher may have approved of. Our desire for neo-Victorian    computing (Steam Punk), craft sites like Etsy, the popularity    of live music events and literature festivals and digital    detoxing all point to a desire for balance and a world where    humans are allowed to focus on what they do best. The partly    generational shift toward temporary digital access rather than    full physical ownership is also an encouraging development    against what might be termed stuffocation.    Schumacher also warned against the concentration of economic    and political power, which he believed would lead to    dehumanisation. Decisions should therefore be made on the basis    of human needs rather than the revenue requirements of    distantly accountable corporations and governments. In this    respect the internet could go either way. It could bring people    together and enable a more locally focussed and sustainable way    or living or it could facilitate the growth of autocratic    governments and monopolistic transnational corporations. But    remember that the dematerialisation of the global economy  the    analogue to digital switch if you will  is largely unseen and    therefore mostly out of mind so very few people are discussing    this at the moment.    To some extent digital payments are a technology in search of a    problem. Cash is easy to carry, easy to use and doesnt require    a power source  except to retrieve it from an ATM. Meanwhile    credit and debit cards are widely accepted worldwide and    online, so why do we need additional channels or formats? Maybe    we dont. Maybe we dont even need money as much as we think.    One of the problems with the digital economy from an economics    standpoint is that digital companies dont produce many jobs.    But maybe this isnt a problem. Once weve achieved shelter and    security and managed to feed ourselves, the things that make us    happy tend to be invisible to economists. The things that    fulfil our deepest human needs are not to be physical things,    but nebulous notions like love, belonging and compassion. This    is reminiscent of Abraham Maslows hierarchy of needs, but    unfortunately self-esteem, altruism, purpose and spirituality    dont directly contribute to GDP or mass employment. Perhaps    they should.    It pains me to say it, but maybe the digital dreamers are onto    something after all. Maybe the digital economy will change our    frame of reference and focus our attention on non-monetary    value and human exchange even if this goes a little crazy at    times.    What would Schumacher make our current economic situation?    Maybe hed see the present day as the start of something nasty.    Maybe hed see it as the start of something beautiful. What I    suspect he would point out is that many people feel that they    have lost control of their lives, especially financially. Job    insecurity, austerity, debt and a lack of secure saving and    pensions make people anxious. This can have physical effects.    According to a study published in the medical magazine The    Lancet, economic conditions can make people and their genetic    dependants sick. Putting to one side the increased risk of    suicide, mental health is a major casualty of volatile economic    and geopolitical conditions. Psychological stress means that    our bodies are flooded with stress hormones and these can make    us ill.    Turbulent economic conditions can also make long lasting    changes to our genes, which can be a catalyst for heart    disease, cancer and depression in later generations. Another    study, co-led by George Slavich at the University of California    at Los Angeles, says that there is historical evidence for such    claims and cites the fact that generations born during    recessions tend to have unusually short lifespans. Research by    Jenny Tung at Duke University in North Carolina also suggests    that if animals perceive they have a lower social rank, the    more active their pro-inflammatory genes become. This may be    applicable to humans perceiving that they are becoming    digital-serfs. Even the anticipation of bad news or negative    events may trigger such changes, which might explain why I    recently heard that the shark in Notting Hill is now on    medication.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>The rest is here:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/toptrends.nowandnext.com\/\" title=\"What's Next: Top Trends | Diary of an accidental futurist ...\">What's Next: Top Trends | Diary of an accidental futurist ...<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Heres my re-write of the chapter on money again.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/futurist\/whats-next-top-trends-diary-of-an-accidental-futurist.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[10],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-202270","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-futurist"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/202270"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=202270"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/202270\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=202270"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=202270"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=202270"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}