You're receiving this email as part of your subscription to Lou Baseneseâs Trend Trader Daily. [Unsubscribe](. [Trend Trader Daily]( Investing in the Digital Garden of Good and Evil Tuesday, September 28, 2021 Is technology inherently good or evil? Before you answer, remember that Googleâs corporate culture was founded on the motto, âDonât be evil.â Yet in 2018, the company suddenly ditched the clause from its code of conduct. Coincidence? I doubt it. Especially when we consider the behavior of other big tech companies, like Facebook (FB). As I shared with Maria Bartiromo on Fox Business this morning (see [here](), Facebook seemingly operates under the motto of âDonât get caught.â But it always does get caught! From the Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal... to failing to moderate content and fake news... to the latest uproar over pausing plans for Instagram Kids after its internal research got leaked that revealed the negative mental health effects of social media on teens. The list goes on and on. Why bring any of this up? Itâs simple, really: Technology has become the epicenter of wealth creation. Google and Facebook, for example, are up a staggering 5,030% and 890% from their IPOs, respectively. Fact is, no sector boasts higher returns. As investors, we canât afford to miss out on such historic wealth grabs, right? Or can we? And more pressingly, should we? > ADVERTISEMENT < The "Plug & Play" Cure for ALL Disease? [Number]( One tiny biotech company is pioneering what could be a cure for cancer. And it could soon expand its technology to treat or even cure ALL disease. The share price of this under-the-radar biotech is still on the ground floor. But an upcoming announcement on November 14th could send its shares soaring â handing early investors a potential windfall. I've personally invested $306,380 into this biotech. And right now, I'm inviting YOU to invest right alongside me! [Click here now to discover all the details»]( Tech Gets a Dose of Morality Did you ever truly stop to think that not all technology â and, therefore, not all profits earned from technology investments â is good? Or more simply, is some technology evil? Before you flippantly discard my inquiry, consider author Mike Doverâs observation in his book, Danteâs Infinite Monkeys: Technology Meets the 7 Deadly Sins: âThe Internet, and technology in general, have provided new ways for wrath, lust, gluttony, sloth, pride, envy and greed to insert themselves into our lives.â Heâs not wrong! Also consider that Iâm a technology investor and analyst. Therefore, my livelihood depends on finding, investing in, and sharing new technology opportunities. So this isnât a self-serving exercise. On the contrary⦠convincing you to look at the world this way could directly and negatively impact my bottom line. Lastly, consider that the bar to qualify as âevilâ isnât as high as you might think. Merriam-Webster defines evil as simply âcausing harm.â Iâm certain we can all think of technologies that cause harm. Some overtly⦠others covertly. Why Iâll Never Own Facebook As a father of two daughters, I can tell you that the recent revelation that Facebook âmake[s] body image issues worse for one in three teen girls,â unequivocally qualifies as causing harm, and by extension can be considered evil. Add that to the companyâs never-ending list of privacy violations and Iâll never own the stock. On principle alone. Iâm not asking you to follow my lead on Facebook. Iâm simply asking you to consider the possibility that all technology investing isnât good. To help you do that, consider the words of much smarter men than me, as they warn us about one of the most promising emerging technologies of our day â artificial intelligence. As famed physicist Stephen Hawking told the BBC, âThe development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race.â Meanwhile, billionaire Elon Musk likens artificial intelligence to âsummoning the demon.â He says itâs âour biggest existential threat.â Do you want any part of investing in such a technology? Even if you did, it would be hard to spend the profits you earned if we no longer existed. So your gains would be useless. Just saying. Tools With Embedded Purpose Getting back to the issue at hand, some will argue that technology canât be evil because itâs simply a tool. Therefore, like money, itâs amoral. It only serves to amplify the good or evil of the one wielding the tool. In this case, humans. Thatâs true. But itâs also true that every tool has an overarching purpose â and, in turn, an embedded morality. For instance, a wheelchair is explicitly designed to assist someone. Whereas an AR-15 is explicitly designed to kill someone. We canât detach the good nature from the first or the evil nature from the second, no matter how hard we try. So again, why am I bringing all of this up? Because I believe itâs an increasingly urgent matter. Slimmer Margins for Error A convergence of advancements in miniaturization, processing power, materials sciences, bandwidth and storage, to name a few, are conspiring to accelerate innovation and adoption of new technologies. Take a look:
(click image to enlarge) It used to take decades for a new technology to achieve 25% market penetration. Now it takes less than five years. Undoubtedly, that figure is going to keep going lower and lower. What does this mean? Well, our forefathers had time to digest and process the potential evils of new technologies â because these innovations were slow to take root in everyday life. But now weâre living in a time when new technologies are being developed and adopted at a faster rate than ever. Time is no longer a luxury we possess to exhaustively explore the potential good and evil of every innovation. If we donât figure out where we stand on the front end, weâre locked into paying the consequences on the back end. Thereâs no hitting the brakes once a new technology gains enough momentum. Once the first robot starts thinking for itself and decides it wants full autonomy, itâs over. Thereâs no putting that genie back in the bottle. Weâre putting all humans in a casket. Again, we need to define the boundaries in advance. For those who insist that we canât possibly agree on a universal morality as a society, youâre wrong. There might be finer and grayer points that are impossible to reconcile. However, religious luminaries, as well as secular thought-leaders agree â weâve all been imprinted with an inherent morality. So there are definitive goods and evils we can all agree on, no matter our background. The Moral and Financial Challenge To be clear, Iâm not writing today to protest progress. Iâm challenging us to ponder the morality of progress and the potential pitfalls before itâs too late. Of course, first, you need to decide if this is an issue worth consideration. Then, you must figure out what you believe. And thatâs where Iâm (hopefully) going to come in. In the coming weeks and months, Iâll be dedicating time to explore these issues for a growing list of emerging technologies â including artificial intelligence, drones, robotics, cryptocurrencies, virtual and augmented reality, gene editing, cybersecurity and brain interfaces. (If you have any specifics youâd like us to evaluate, let me know by simply replying to this email.) Whereas the mainstream financial press only considers the wealth-producing power of these advancements, weâre going to focus on the threats and the opportunities. Both direct and indirect, in the present and in the future. So yes, youâll still be receiving a healthy dose of technology and trend investment ideas from me. But youâll also be receiving another perspective on them. After all, as Marvin Minsky, co-founder of the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, says, âYou donât really understand something if you only understand it one way.â Amen! Weâre not going to try to arrive at any definitive answers, mind you. Instead, our overarching goal is to provoke you to seek answers â and then act and invest accordingly. If you think this is all a pointless exercise because we donât (or canât) have any impact as individuals, think again! Beyond being investors, weâre consumers of all this technology. Without customers, thereâs no way for a business to survive or a technology to endure. In other words, every time we decide to tweet, snap, buy a smartphone, hail an Uber â any interaction we have with tech on a daily basis â weâre enabling technological progress and, in some cases, evil. By the same token, we can impede this progress and redirect it in more appropriate directions. And thereâs tremendous power in our collective efforts to have a direct and lasting impact. Bottom line: We have the ability â and the responsibility â to impact tomorrow. Iâm going to start taking these abilities seriously here. Ultimately, instead of interrupting our pursuit to increase our bottom lines, it should enhance it. TREND TRADER PRO
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