The New Philanthropy: Interview with Craig of Craigslist
An interview with Craig Newmark (the Craig of Craigslist) on the phenomenon of a new philanthropy, created in part by the boom in the technology economy:
Related posts:
The Philosophy of Philanthropy
Q. Is the philanthropy of the likes of Bill Gates, Larry Page, Jimmy Wales and yourself a truly new force in society?
A. I think it’s novel in two senses:
– greater focus on investment in self-sustaining good, where good efforts can sustain themselves or maybe get others to do even more good. example: microfinance
– involve many others in their efforts, creating mass movements. examples: wikipedia, microfinance
Q. Has the rapidity of your success (you’re just 55, I think) made you better able to effect positive change in the world?
A. It’s been thirteen years, not so rapid, probably not a factor.
on the other hand, I’m a nerd, the whole plastic pocket protector cliche. In school, a nerd gets excluded from a lot, and I remember that, and choose to use the Net as a tool for the inclusion of everyone. So it’s not age that’s relevant, but inner reflection followed by action.
Q. You’ve said that you believe in keeping the Internet free. Are there other things you think should be free to everyone (like higher education and healthcare)?
A. I think education and healthcare should be freely available to everyone, but how to make that happen adequately, no one’s quite solved that.
Q. It often seems that governments aren’t able to meet critical social challenges. Is the work of the new philanthropists filling a void or allowing government off the hook?
A. I think that work is about finding ways to make public/private partnerships solve problems.
Q. With Craigslist you have stayed connected to your users by handling customer service. In your philanthropic work, how do you field-test your ideas and convictions?
A. The work’s just started, will be decades long in many cases, and I just don’t know how to measure success now.
