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The currency of the new economy is trust

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    So if someone asked you
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    for the three words that would sum up
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    your reputation, what would you say?
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    How would people describe your judgment,
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    your knowledge, your behaviors, in different situations?
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    Today I'd like to explore with you
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    why the answer to this question
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    will become profoundly important
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    in an age where reputation will be your most valuable asset.
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    I'd like to start by introducing you to someone
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    whose life has been changed by a marketplace
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    fueled by reputation.
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    Sebastian Sandys has been a bed and breakfast host
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    on Airbnb since 2008.
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    I caught up with him recently, where, over the course
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    of several cups of tea, he told me how
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    hosting guests from all over the world
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    has enriched his life.
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    More than 50 people have come to stay in the 18th-century
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    watchhouse he lives in with his cat, Squeak.
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    Now, I mention Squeak because Sebastian's first guest
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    happened to see a rather large mouse run across the kitchen,
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    and she promised that she would refrain from leaving
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    a bad review on one condition: he got a cat.
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    And so Sebastian bought Squeak to protect his reputation.
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    Now, as many of you know, Airbnb is a peer-to-peer
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    marketplace that matches people who have space to rent
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    with people who are looking for a place to stay
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    in over 192 countries.
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    The places being rented out are things that you might
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    expect, like spare rooms and holiday homes,
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    but part of the magic is the unique places
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    that you can now access: treehouses, teepees,
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    airplane hangars, igloos.
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    If you don't like the hotel, there's a castle down the road
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    that you can rent for 5,000 dollars a night.
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    It's a fantastic example of how technology
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    is creating a market
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    for things that never had a marketplace before.
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    Now let me show you these heat maps of Paris
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    to see how insanely fast it's growing.
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    This image here is from 2008.
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    The pink dots represent host properties.
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    Even four years ago, letting strangers stay in your home
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    seemed like a crazy idea.
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    Now the same view in 2010.
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    And now, 2012.
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    There is an Airbnb host on almost every main street in Paris.
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    Now, what's happening here is people are realizing
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    the power of technology to unlock the idling capacity
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    and value of all kinds of assets,
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    from skills to spaces to material possessions,
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    in ways and on a scale never possible before.
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    It's an economy and culture called collaborative consumption,
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    and, through it, people like Sebastian
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    are becoming micro-entrepreneurs.
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    They're empowered to make money and save money
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    from their existing assets.
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    But the real magic and the secret source behind
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    collaborative consumption marketplaces like Airbnb
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    isn't the inventory or the money.
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    It's using the power of technology to build trust
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    between strangers.
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    This side of Airbnb really hit home to Sebastian last summer
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    during the London riots.
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    He woke up around 9, and he checked his email
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    and he saw a bunch of messages all asking him
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    if he was okay.
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    Former guests from around the world had seen that
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    the riots were happening just down the street, and wanted
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    to check if he needed anything.
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    Sebastian actually said to me, he said, "Thirteen former guests
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    contacted me before my own mother rang." (Laughter)
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    Now, this little anecdote gets to the heart of why
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    I'm really passionate about collaborative consumption,
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    and why, after I finished my book, I decided
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    I'm going to try and spread this into a global movement.
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    Because at its core, it's about empowerment.
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    It's about empowering people to make meaningful connections,
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    connections that are enabling us to rediscover
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    a humanness that we've lost somewhere along the way,
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    by engaging in marketplaces like Airbnb, like Kickstarter,
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    like Etsy, that are built on personal relationships
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    versus empty transactions.
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    Now the irony is that these ideas are actually taking us back
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    to old market principles and collaborative behaviors
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    that are hard-wired in all of us.
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    They're just being reinvented in ways that are relevant
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    for the Facebook age.
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    We're literally beginning to realize that we have wired
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    our world to share, swap, rent, barter or trade
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    just about anything. We're sharing our cars on WhipCar,
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    our bikes on Spinlister, our offices on Loosecubes,
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    our gardens on Landshare. We're lending and borrowing
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    money from strangers on Zopa and Lending Club.
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    We are trading lessons on everything from sushi-making
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    to coding on Skillshare,
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    and we're even sharing our pets on DogVacay.
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    Now welcome to the wonderful world of collaborative consumption
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    that's enabling us to match wants with haves
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    in more democratic ways.
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    Now, collaborative consumption is creating the start
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    of a transformation in the way we think about supply and demand,
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    but it's also a part of a massive value shift underway,
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    where instead of consuming to keep up with the Joneses,
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    people are consuming to get to know the Joneses.
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    But the key reason why it's taking off now so fast
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    is because every new advancement of technology
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    increases the efficiency and the social glue of trust
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    to make sharing easier and easier.
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    Now, I've looked at thousands of these marketplaces,
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    and trust and efficiency are always the critical ingredients.
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    Let me give you an example.
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    Meet 46-year-old Chris Mok, who has, I bet,
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    the best job title here of SuperRabbit.
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    Now, four years ago, Chris lost his job, unfortunately,
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    as an art buyer at Macy's, and like so many people,
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    he struggled to find a new one during the recession.
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    And then he happened to stumble across a post about
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    TaskRabbit.
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    Now, the story behind TaskRabbit starts like so many
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    great stories with a very cute dog by the name of Kobe.
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    Now what happened was, in February 2008,
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    Leah and her husband were waiting for a cab to take them
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    out for dinner, when Kobe came trotting up to them
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    and he was salivating with saliva.
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    They realized they'd run out of dog food.
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    Kevin had to cancel the cab and trudge out in the snow.
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    Now, later that evening, the two self-confessed tech geeks
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    starting talking about how cool it would be if some kind of
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    eBay for errands existed.
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    Six months later, Leah quit her job,
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    and TaskRabbit was born.
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    At the time, she didn't realize that she was actually hitting
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    on a bigger idea she later called service networking.
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    It's essentially about how we use our online relationships
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    to get things done in the real world.
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    Now the way TaskRabbit works is, people outsource
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    the tasks that they want doing, name the price
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    they're willing to pay, and then vetted Rabbits
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    bid to run the errand.
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    Yes, there's actually a four-stage, rigorous interview process
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    that's designed to find the people that would make
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    great personal assistants and weed out the dodgy Rabbits.
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    Now, there's over 4,000 Rabbits across the United States
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    and 5,000 more on the waiting list.
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    Now the tasks being posted are things that you might
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    expect, like help with household chores
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    or doing some supermarket runs.
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    I actually learned the other day that 12 and a half thousand
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    loads of laundry have been cleaned and folded
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    through TaskRabbit.
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    But I love that the number one task posted,
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    over a hundred times a day, is something that many of us
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    have felt the pain of doing:
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    yes, assembling Ikea furniture. (Laughter) (Applause)
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    It's brilliant. Now, we may laugh, but Chris here
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    is actually making up to 5,000 dollars a month
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    running errands around his life.
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    And 70 percent of this new labor force
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    were previously unemployed or underemployed.
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    I think TaskRabbit and other examples of collaborative consumption
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    are like lemonade stands on steroids. They're just brilliant.
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    Now, when you think about it, it's amazing, right,
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    that over the past 20 years, we've evolved
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    from trusting people online to share information
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    to trusting to handing over our credit card information,
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    and now we're entering the third trust wave:
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    connecting trustworthy strangers to create all kinds
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    of people-powered marketplaces.
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    I actually came across this fascinating study
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    by the Pew Center this week that revealed
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    that an active Facebook user is three times as likely
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    as a non-Internet user to believe that most people are trustworthy.
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    Virtual trust will transform the way we trust one another
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    face to face.
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    Now, with all of my optimism, and I am an optimist,
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    comes a healthy dose of caution, or rather, an urgent need
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    to address some pressing, complex questions.
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    How to ensure our digital identities reflect our
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    real world identities? Do we want them to be the same?
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    How do we mimic the way trust is built face-to-face online?
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    How do we stop people who've behaved badly
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    in one community doing so under a different guise?
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    In a similar way that companies often use some kind of
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    credit rating to decide whether to give you a mobile plan,
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    or the rate of a mortgage, marketplaces that depend
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    on transactions between relative strangers
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    need some kind of device to let you know that Sebastian
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    and Chris are good eggs,
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    and that device is reputation.
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    Reputation is the measurement of how much a community trusts you.
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    Let's just take a look at Chris.
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    You can see that over 200 people have given him
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    an average rating over 4.99 out of 5.
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    There are over 20 pages of reviews of his work
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    describing him as super-friendly and fast,
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    and he's reached level 25, the highest level,
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    making him a SuperRabbit.
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    Now — (Laughter) -- I love that word, SuperRabbit.
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    And interestingly, what Chris has noted is that as his reputation
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    has gone up, so has his chances of winning a bid
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    and how much he can charge.
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    In other words, for SuperRabbits, reputation
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    has a real world value.
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    Now, I know what you might be thinking.
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    Well, this isn't anything new. Just think of power sellers
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    on eBay or star ratings on Amazon.
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    The difference today is that, with every trade we make,
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    comment we leave, person we flag, badge we earn,
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    we leave a reputation trail
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    of how well we can and can't be trusted.
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    And it's not just the breadth but the volume
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    of reputation data out there that is staggering.
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    Just consider this: Five million nights have been booked
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    on Airbnb in the past six months alone.
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    30 million rides have been shared on Carpooling.com.
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    This year, two billion dollars worth of loans
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    will go through peer-to-peer lending platforms.
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    This adds up to millions of pieces of reputation data
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    on how well we behave or misbehave.
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    Now, capturing and correlating the trails of information
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    that we leave in different places is a massive challenge,
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    but one we're being asked to figure out.
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    What the likes of Sebastian are starting to rightfully ask
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    is, shouldn't they own their reputation data?
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    Shouldn't the reputation that he's personally invested
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    on building on Airbnb mean that it should travel with him
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    from one community to another?
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    What I mean by this is, say he started selling second-hand
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    books on Amazon. Why should he have to start from scratch?
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    It's a bit like when I moved from New York to Sydney.
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    It was ridiculous. I couldn't get a mobile phone plan
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    because my credit history didn't travel with me.
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    I was essentially a ghost in the system.
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    Now I'm not suggesting that the next stage
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    of the reputation economy is about
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    adding up multiple ratings into some kind of empty score.
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    People's lives are too complex, and who wants to do that?
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    I also want to be clear that this isn't about adding up
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    tweets and likes and friends in a Klout-like fashion.
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    Those guys are measuring influence, not behaviors
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    that indicate our trustworthiness.
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    But the most important thing that we have to keep in mind
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    is that reputation is largely contextual.
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    Just because Sebastian is a wonderful host
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    does not mean that he can assemble Ikea furniture.
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    The big challenge is figuring out what data
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    makes sense to pull, because the future's
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    going to be driven by a smart aggregation of reputation,
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    not a single algorithm.
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    It's only a matter of time before we'll be able to perform
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    a Facebook- or Google-like search
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    and see a complete picture of someone's behaviors
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    in different contexts over time.
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    I envision a realtime stream of who has trusted you,
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    when, where and why, your reliability on TaskRabbit,
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    your cleanliness as a guest on Airbnb,
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    the knowledge that you display on Quora or Tripovo,
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    they'll all live together in one place,
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    and this will live in some kind of reputation dashboard
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    that will paint a picture of your reputation capital.
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    Now this is a concept that I'm currently researching
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    and writing my next book on, and currently define
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    as the worth of your reputation, your intentions,
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    capabilities and values across communities and marketplaces.
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    This isn't some far-off frontier.
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    There are actually a wave of startups like Connect.Me
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    and Legit and TrustCloud that are figuring out how
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    you can aggregate, monitor and use your online reputation.
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    Now, I realize that this concept may sound a little
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    Big Brother to some of you, and yes, there are some
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    enormous transparency and privacy issues to solve,
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    but ultimately, if we can collect our personal reputation,
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    we can actually control it more, and extract
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    the immense value that will flow from it.
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    Also, more so than our credit history,
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    we can actually shape our reputation.
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    Just think of Sebastian
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    and how he bought the cat to influence his.
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    Now privacy issues aside, the other really interesting issue
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    I'm looking at is how do we empower digital ghosts,
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    people [who] for whatever reason, are not active online,
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    but are some of the most trustworthy people in the world?
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    How do we take their contributions to their jobs,
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    their communities and their families,
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    and convert that value into reputation capital?
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    Ultimately, when we get it right, reputation capital
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    could create a massive positive disruption
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    in who has power, trust and influence.
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    A three-digit score, your traditional credit history,
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    that only 30 percent of us actually know what it is,
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    will no longer be the determining factor
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    in how much things cost, what we can access,
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    and, in many instances, limit what we can do in the world.
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    Indeed, reputation is a currency that I believe will become
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    more powerful than our credit history in the 21st century.
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    Reputation will be the currency that says
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    that you can trust me.
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    Now the interesting thing is, reputation
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    is the socioeconomic lubricant
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    that makes collaborative consumption work and scale,
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    but the sources it will be generated from,
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    and its applications, are far bigger than this space alone.
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    Let me give you one example from the world of recruiting,
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    where reputation data will make the résumé seem
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    like an archaic relic of the past.
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    Four years ago, tech bloggers and entrepreneurs
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    Joel Spolsky and Jeff Atwood, decided to start something
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    called Stack Overflow.
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    Now, Stack Overflow is basically a platform where
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    experienced programmers can ask
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    other good programmers highly detailed technical questions
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    on things like tiny pixels and chrome extensions.
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    This site receives five and a half thousand questions a day,
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    and 80 percent of these receive accurate answers.
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    Now users earn reputation in a whole range of ways,
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    but it's basically by convincing their peers
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    they know what they're talking about.
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    Now a few months after this site launched, the founders
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    heard about something interesting,
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    and it actually didn't surprise them.
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    What they heard was that users were putting
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    their reputation scores on the top of their résumés,
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    and that recruiters were searching the platform
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    to find people with unique talents.
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    Now thousands of programmers today are finding
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    better jobs this way, because Stack Overflow
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    and the reputation dashboards provide a priceless window
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    into how someone really behaves,
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    and what their peers think of them.
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    But the bigger principle of what's happening behind Stack Overflow,
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    I think, is incredibly exciting.
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    People are starting to realize that the reputation
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    they generate in one place has value
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    beyond the environments from which it was built.
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    You know, it's very interesting.
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    When you talk to super-users, whether that's SuperRabbits
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    or super-people on Stack Overflow, or Uberhosts,
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    they all talk about how having a high reputation
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    unlocks a sense of their own power.
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    On Stack Overflow, it creates a level playing field,
  • 17:51 - 17:54
    enabling the people with the real talent to rise to the top.
  • 17:54 - 17:57
    On Airbnb, the people often become more important
  • 17:57 - 18:00
    than the spaces. On TaskRabbit,
  • 18:00 - 18:03
    it gives people control of their economic activity.
  • 18:03 - 18:06
    Now at the end of my tea with Sebastian, he told me how,
  • 18:06 - 18:10
    on a bad, rainy day, when he hasn't had a customer
  • 18:10 - 18:13
    in his bookstore, he thinks of all the people around
  • 18:13 - 18:16
    the world who've said something wonderful about him,
  • 18:16 - 18:19
    and what that says about him as a person.
  • 18:19 - 18:22
    He's turning 50 this year, and he's convinced
  • 18:22 - 18:26
    that the rich tapestry of reputation he's built on Airbnb
  • 18:26 - 18:29
    will lead him to doing something interesting
  • 18:29 - 18:31
    with the rest of his life.
  • 18:31 - 18:35
    You know, there are only a few windows in history
  • 18:35 - 18:38
    where the opportunity exists to reinvent
  • 18:38 - 18:42
    part of how our socioeconomic system works.
  • 18:42 - 18:44
    We're living through one of those moments.
  • 18:44 - 18:48
    I believe that we are at the start of a collaborative revolution
  • 18:48 - 18:52
    that will be as significant as the Industrial Revolution.
  • 18:52 - 18:55
    In the 20th century, the invention of traditional credit
  • 18:55 - 18:58
    transformed our consumer system, and in many ways
  • 18:58 - 19:01
    controlled who had access to what.
  • 19:01 - 19:04
    In the 21st century, new trust networks,
  • 19:04 - 19:08
    and the reputation capital they generate, will reinvent
  • 19:08 - 19:12
    the way we think about wealth, markets, power
  • 19:12 - 19:16
    and personal identity, in ways we can't yet even imagine.
  • 19:16 - 19:19
    Thank you very much. (Applause)
  • 19:19 - 19:25
    (Applause)
Title:
The currency of the new economy is trust
Speaker:
Rachel Botsman
Description:

There's been an explosion of collaborative consumption -- web-powered sharing of cars, apartments, skills. Rachel Botsman explores the currency that makes systems like Airbnb and Taskrabbit work: trust, influence, and what she calls "reputation capital."

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
19:46

English subtitles

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