CONCEPT
Democratic Technology
Gore's framing for technology governed through the informed deliberation of citizens rather than the competitive dynamics of corporations — the alternative to <em>technological autocracy</em>.
Democratic technology is Al Gore's term for the alternative to surrendering technological governance to market forces. It names a mode of technology development and deployment in which citizens, through functioning democratic institutions, shape the trajectory of powerful tools — what is permitted, what is funded, what is constrained, what is incentivized. The concept is not anti-technology. It is anti-autocracy. Its opposite is not the absence of technology but technological autocracy — the mode in which the trajectory of the most powerful cognitive tool in human history is determined by the competitive dynamics of a handful of corporations operating under incentive structures that systematically discount the long-term interests of the majority.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The concept rests on Gore's foundational proposition that technology and democracy are deeply interdependent systems rather than separate domains that occasionally intersect. Democratic governance shapes the regulatory environment in which technology develops. Technology shapes the information environment in which democratic deliberation occurs. When either system malfunctions, the other suffers. When both malfunction simultaneously, the compound effects