PicoBlog

Marc Andreessen on Availability Cascades

Marc Andreessen writes,

An availability cascade is what happens when a social cascade rips through a population based on a more or less arbitrary topic — whatever topic happens to be in front of people when the cascade starts.

…Does this new liquid peer-to-peer online availability cascade environment explain “the Great Weirding” that so many people feel, including me? I would say yes.

Is this all going to intensify further in the years ahead? Most definitely. Strap in. This is the most normal and placid things are ever going to be, the most innocent and naive we are ever going to be. Things are only going to get stranger from here, as availability cascades whip through the experiences of our lives with ever greater fury.

What are some good examples of availability cascades? I would say: “meme stocks,” such as GameStop; Black Lives Matter in the wake of George Floyd’s death; coverage of the rise and fall of SBF; preferred pronouns; the Tea Party; the Arab Spring.

I would define an availability cascade as a phenomenon possessing a high ratio of short-term attention relative to long-term significance.

  • The Beatles were not an availability cascade. Herman’s Hermits were.

  • Milton Friedman’s monetary theory was not an availability cascade. Stephanie Kelton’s Modern Monetary theory was.

  • Chess and Scrabble were not availability cascades. Pong and Pokemon were. [UPDATE: Should have written “Pokemon Go”]

Back in the twentieth century, availability cascades were controlled by gatekeepers. I think of Walter Cronkite on the Tet Offensive during the Vietnam War. In those days, you could not have an outsider availability cascade entrepreneur with the power of Donald Trump or Jordan Peterson or Greta Thunberg.

In the field of economics, MIT was a gatekeeper. Paul Samuelson. Stan Fischer. Fischer decided who would have a career as a macroeconomist and who wouldn’t. Fischer’s students became central bankers around the world. The latest is Kazuo Ueda, the new head of the Bank of Japan.

One important factor limiting information cascades today is that we are fracturing into subcultures. The most popular television show today reaches nothing like the proportion of households who watched I Love Lucy or MASH. See Benedict Evans, slide 49 (pointer from Tyler). So nowadays most information cascades are contained within just one subculture.

Just within Silicon Valley, there is a libertarian subculture, a progressive subculture, an Indian diaspora subculture, a start-up subculture, an AI subculture, and more. Then widen your lens to view all of the other parts of America and their subcultures. Then widen your lens further to include the rest of the world.

Most availability cascades sweep through only one or two subcultures, without ever touching the rest. Only a tiny fraction of cascades sweep through a large fraction of subcultures.

Availability cascades today are especially ephemeral. In a Martin Gurri world, political eruptions are fleeting. We don’t have a temperance movement, a labor movement, a Civil Rights movement, or an anti-Communist movement. We just have pop-up protest demonstrations with no agenda or effective organization.

Ultimately, human society cannot live by availability cascades. We cannot operate with mobs surging this way and that, with no anchor to reality. People with strong values and clear focus on truth will eventually matter.

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Availability Cascades

The most important idea and paper I’ve encountered in the last 20 years is “availability cascades”. The paper is here: https://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1036&context=public_law_and_legal_theory ; the authors are Timur Kuran…

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a year ago · Marc Andreessen

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Filiberto Hargett

Update: 2024-12-02