
The Kicker Douglas Rushkoff on Being the Intellectual Dominatrix of Billionaire Tech Bros
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Nov 25, 2025 Douglas Rushkoff, a media theorist known for his insights on technology’s cultural impact, chats with Emily Bell and Heather Chaplin about navigating the present amidst digital chaos. They discuss the origins of internet subcultures and critique the dominance of Silicon Valley. Rushkoff shares his views on AI's potential to reshape employment and the fragility of billionaire escape fantasies. He highlights the importance of local journalism and community ties as resistance against authoritarianism, envisioning a future that balances global and local media narratives.
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AI Could Replace Human Consumers
- Tech elites may prefer an economy where AIs act as both producers and consumers, making human consumers unnecessary.
- That creates a model where corporations can sustain themselves with AI-to-AI value loops, excluding ordinary people.
Four Moments That Changed The Net
- Key inflection points were allowing commercial traffic, John Barlow's Declaration, Netscape's IPO, and the AOL–Time Warner merger.
- Each shifted the net from communal commons toward commodified, corporatized infrastructure and incentives for extraction.
AOL's Onramp Changed Online Culture
- When AOL plugged into the wider Internet, millions of new users flooded Usenet and chatrooms with basic questions and porn queries.
- That surge revealed how consumer mass-adoption altered community norms and primed media consolidation like the AOL–Time Warner deal.









