CONCEPT
Installation-Phase Incumbents
The parties that captured the gains of the installation phase and whose political and economic resources are deployed during the turning point to shape regulatory outcomes that protect their positions against deployment-phase restructuring.
Installation-phase incumbents are the organizations and individuals who benefited most from the installation phase's concentration of gains and whose interests in the turning point contest are to protect their positions against the redistribution that the deployment phase requires. They are not villains — they are rational actors protecting legitimate investments — but their collective political influence determines whether the turning point resolves progressively or regressively. In every previous turning point, the contest between installation-phase incumbents and reformers has determined the speed and completeness of the deployment phase. Where incumbents captured the regulatory process, deployment was delayed; where reformers prevailed, the golden age was more expansive.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The pattern is consistent across revolutions. The canal companies lobbied against railway legislation. The railway companies lobbied against road-building subsidies. The telegraph monopolies lobbied against telephone regulation. The broadcast media lobbied against internet deregulation. In each case, incumbents used their accumulated political influence — lobbying capacity, regulatory relationships, public credibility, campaign contributions