Though it was "correct" at the time, I think it has socialized Growth Maximalism into Tech, which is bad for us.
paulgraham.com/growth.html
- "Past Good, Present Bad"
- t = 0, y = 100; t = 1, y = 0
Ideas are instantiated in a context and should be evaluated within that context.
They're lenticular.
Let's look at the essay itself. -->
- Growth does not take externalities into account.
- Startups take this Growth culture with them as they scale. Facebook's culture is *still*: "we're the little guy, growing at all costs to beat the big guy" even though they're clearly "the big guy"
Creating an arms race for:
- Attention by hijacking addiction in the limbic system
- Data through Surveillance Capitalism
Or unique country impact:
- Arab Spring fragility
- Myanmar fake news --> genocide
(Therefore, Growth Maximalism bad.)
(Is being an Anti-Maximalism Maximalist ok? Answer is likely "everything in moderation, even moderation.")
There's no clear answer here. But Startups should vector towards taking externalities into account. (e.g. Lyft now carbon offsets all trips.)
What about when W/W growth is not the KPI? This gets into double or triple bottom lines, plus recent innovations like B Corps.
If we change our optimization function, what will we discover through evolutionary pressure?
If we think about the Startup/Tech Ecosystem as an entity itself, I think our hill-climbing has hit a local maximum.
And from that concludes software uniquely solves a+b.
Hashtag-based memes can virally spread. Should they count as Startup = Growth?