Dear Chirantan,
Just read your thought-provoking article :
Pay
for your Facebook posts?
- Where
you write :
A better approach is to reduce the supply of
bad content ex ante, using a price mechanism.
Facebook should adopt a revised business model
requiring users to pay a small fee each time they publish or share a post,
while comments are still free.
The rate could be as low as a few paise /
rupees.
Without doubt, your suggestion will drastically
bring down fake news etc
But it may also reduce the number of users –
something which Facebook may not want
In my yesterday’s blog ( link below ) , I have
suggested a different approach which will not reduce the incidence of fake news
etc but will make Facebook pay the users for their personal / private
data !
Facebook is unlikely to “ willingly “ agree
with my suggestion either
But if it won’t , then maybe we can learn to
live without Facebook !
With regards,
Hemen
Digital Dividend from Demographic Data [ 4 D ]
From: Prof. Chirantan
Chatterjee [mailto:chirantanc@iima.ac.in]
Sent: Monday, January 7, 2019 3:18 AM
To: Hemen Parekh
Subject: Re: I HOPE POLICY MAKERS READ YOUR ARTICLE
Sent: Monday, January 7, 2019 3:18 AM
To: Hemen Parekh
Subject: Re: I HOPE POLICY MAKERS READ YOUR ARTICLE
Thanks
Hemen bhai..
Best,
Chirantan
On
Sun, Jan 6, 2019, 07:11 Hemen Parekh <hcp@recruitguru.com wrote:
Dear
Shri Chaterjee,
Just
read your above-mentioned article , where , at one place you write :
A fourth point comes from the use of
technology, not just in the old telemedicine or the new
wearable Fitbit kind of a way, but also with futuristic
AI to structurally leapfrog the supply-demand gap
in healthcare.
China has already made substantial investments here and some
Indian healthcare entrepreneurs and multinational firms like Microsoft and
Amazon are watching the space with interest if not having already made quiet
dents into it.
Policymakers in Delhi could do well to brainstorm and create an AI strategy for Indian healthcare attending to innovation incentives, entrepreneurship, ethics,
privacy and pricing around it, complementarily laying out health technology
assessment protocols as well.
In this context, you might like to look up my following
emails to Cabinet Ministers / NITI Aayog / PM-EAC etc :
Will “ Ayushman Bharat “ listen
?
Modicare : A Game Changer
Personal Health History : NHS
Ayushman Bharat : Think Big
Thank You Madam Maneka Gandhiji
,
With regards,
Hemen Parekh
No comments:
Post a Comment