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CONCEPT

Behavioral Surplus

Human experience claimed as free raw material by platforms—the totality of what users do, search, linger over, abandon—extracted and processed into <em>prediction products</em> sold in behavioral futures markets.
Behavioral surplus is Shoshana Zuboff's term for the economic transformation at the heart of surveillance capitalism: the systematic conversion of human experience into proprietary data. Not the data users voluntarily provide to receive a service, but the excess—the metadata, the interaction patterns, the behavioral residue that platforms claim as raw material for a production process users did not choose. The extraction is unilateral and comprehensive. Every click, search, pause, and abandonment generates surplus. In the AI age, behavioral surplus extends into cognitive labor itself: the prompts entered, revisions requested, directions pursued and abandoned—all captured as detailed maps of users' cognitive architecture, more intimate than any previous form of extraction because they reveal how people think rather than merely what they want.

In The You On AI Field Guide

The concept emerged from Zuboff's recognition that Google's original business model had undergone a fundamental mutation around 2001-2002. Initially, the company avoided behavioral targeting—Larry Page called it the "corruption of the search engine." Financial pressure changed the calculus. The realization that

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