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Okay all you pessimists and realists, you're not going to like this, but that won't be all that surprising. EBay chairman and founder Pierre Omidyar says people are basically good, and that basic goodness is what made eBay what it is today.
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| EBay Explores Human Nature, Likes What It Sees |
Lesson 1: Business is a force for good (Again, hold your comments, he said "business" and not "corporatism," as might be your first objection).
Lesson 2: Given the right environment, people can discover power within themselves to make good things happen.
Mmmm. Excuse me a moment as I rub that into my skin and like it, hope beyond reason, and reconsider my thoughts on altruism and human nature, and ponder whether or not turning 30 has really jaded me forever. Maybe I just need more coffee.
Kagle interjects to back up Pierre, reiterating the idea that people can simultaneously "do good and be successful," an idea that inspired eBay from its roots, and that the people on eBay genuinely want to help others.
Barring a few bad apples, we can imagine, like fathers sharing their parenting skills via Nintendo boxes of rocks, and opportunists selling locks of Britney's hair. To eBay's credit, the team weeds these out with good-faith vigor – though people are basically good, at least born as a good, clean slate, they are often polluted over time, like good ideas, and good websites. Cleaning and showering are ongoing human crises.
Nonetheless, Pierre believes in this innate goodness – a nice rebuttal to Original Sin – and believes eBay is "just beginning to impact the world, if you believe in people and trust each other."
That's a tall order for the Aristocracy, Pierre, but so was the idea that housewives, paupers, the physically afflicted – well, anybody – could run a proper online business with eBay. And that's working out so far…
Bob interjects again, says, eBay "brings the world together, and over time…will impact communities, cities, and even countries. And that will change the world."
Pierre was selling the idea better, but that's okay. "Third parties," says Pierre, "consumers, developers, are the ones that will lead."
Scoff all you want, he could be right – has been so far – and at the least, it's a nice battle cry.
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1 Comment
"Kool-Aid, flowers,
"Kool-Aid, flowers, handholding and Kumbaya for the comments section. "Great line lol
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