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Paul Millerd's avatar

asked ChatGPT for some further examples:

Low Roads to High Places (Short List)

1. Nuclear Power: Intended to bring cheap, clean energy, but first arrived via weapons and arms races.

2. Commercial Internet: Began with academic ideals, scaled mainly through spam, pornography, and monopolistic platforms.

3. mRNA Vaccines: Underfunded until a global pandemic created an emergency rush that finally drove major investment.

4. Electric Vehicles: Oil industry and carmaker resistance gave way only when climate disasters and market forces pushed EVs mainstream.

5. Data-Driven Policing: Pitched as a solution for fair law enforcement, but mostly emerged from “tough on crime” politics and mass surveillance before it could be repurposed for better outcomes.

High Road Possibilities (Short List)

1. Montreal Protocol: Quick global action on CFCs to protect the ozone layer.

2. Smallpox Eradication: Coordinated WHO campaign that wiped out a human disease for the first time.

3. Antarctic Treaty: Major powers voluntarily reserved a resource-rich continent for science and peace.

4. CERN Collaboration: Nations pooling resources for fundamental research, giving rise to the World Wide Web.

5. Global Landmine Ban (Ottawa Treaty): Widespread support to limit a horrific weapon, driven largely by a moral coalition of NGOs and governments.

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Venkatesh Rao's avatar

Struck me after I posted this that this is basically the big-brother hypothesis to the Richard Gabriel "worse is better" hypothesis about code.

Technologies often have a version of this: TCP/IP vs. OSI, betamax vs. VHS, Sony HD vs. DVD, HTML vs. og hypertext vision/Xanadu etc etc. What this model adds is the socio-political dynamics of low-roadism even when there are no tech "razors" driving choices.

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