It’s a pretty nice one.
[laughs] I know you worked with the startup called pol.is. For instance, for this kind of use of AI, how can you make sure -- you are already said [inaudible 50:34] was the law -- that the civic tech startups, like that one, don’t become an industry for private actors? Facebook, in a way, could have been said a civic tech at the beginning.
Do you feel great about automation in manufacturing robotics?
Yeah?
You think it’s great?
What is the good thing of automation to you?
Don’t you fear about unemployment, and large amounts of people having quite nothing to do in a way, in a traditional job?
You don’t think there will be maybe just 10, 20, 30 percent more of unemployed people?
[laughs] By the way, I had a question about this. I see the time is running, but what do you think about basic income? Do you think it’s good? Do you think we should have maybe contributive income as Bernard Stiegler was talking about, or maybe basic services like in England now they talk about? There is a group talking about basic services.
It’s pretty good. [laughs]
Maybe a last question, to [inaudible 56:53] things. A last question about how you actually hack the government, because maybe the biggest answer we need at the global level is to be like you -- to enter the government, to hack it, in a way, and to make it more easy.
How do you think these kind of things can happen in other countries? The culture can play a role, but is there a lesson you can give, like a recipe?
I see. If I think of the French system as purely vertical [inaudible 59:20] , so when you’re at the top, you give the shit back to the one down, and so on. It’s pretty interesting to see that. I’ll check if I have any other question. Could be working.
Maybe one last question, a short one. How do you think the social entrepreneurship field, the civil society, and the technology, maybe digital or deep tech, can work together? They should work together, for sure, but how can they work together more?
You?
Thank you. Thank you very much. I think I got all the questions. It was really interesting to get further...You’re so open. The usual discussions I can have with VC firms or with business entrepreneurship people, enlarging your view, which is...
Sorry. I’m getting tired. My English is not making sense.
It’s also part of our reflection that we talk about how the fact that it doesn’t go only about business and entrepreneurship, but rather in the political field, in the spiritual field, if I can say in the physical field. Still, we need to find a way to get the attraction of this point through talking about the business.
It’s pretty interesting. I will communicate. If we have verbatims of you, we will ask you first to make sure that you agree with them.
Yeah.
Thank you.