Hollywood’s role in innovation… and sopa | techcrunch


Hollywood’s role in innovation… and sopa | techcrunch

Play all audios:


EDITOR’S NOTE: _Professor Vivek Wadhwa is VP of Academics and Innovation at Singularity University; Fellow, Arthur & Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance, Stanford University;


Director of Research, Center for Entrepreneurship and Research Commercialization, Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University and Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Halle Institute of Global


Learning, Emory University. Follow him on Twitter: @wadhwa._ Silicon Valley may be a garden of innovation, but many of the seeds were sown by Hollywood. Earlier generations of innovators


were inspired by shows such as _Star Trek_, _Lost in Space_, and _The Jetsons_; later generations, by films such as _Aliens_, _Terminator_, and _Avatar_. Hollywood brought science fiction to


the masses and gave people big things to dream about. And music spread the inspiration — it was a social network before social networks existed. These were some of the things we discussed


at the Singularity University executive program on the Mulberry Street set at Hollywood’s Fox Studios, last weekend. Entertainer and technologist will.i.am, Fox Filmed Entertainment Chairman


and CEO Jim Gianopulos, and Tesla and SpaceX founder, Elon Musk, provided some amazing insights into the symbiotic relationship between Hollywood and Silicon Valley. With the SOPA battles


still fresh in their minds, many people in Silicon Valley view Hollywood as an evil entity seeking to limit how they watch the movies that they legally bought, or threatening to sue or shut


down anyone who watches, searches for, or even thinks about a movie that may be pirated. Down South, Hollywood believes that it is fighting for survival; that rather than being grateful,


Silicon Valley is behaving like a predator. So where is the truth? Let’s start with what Jim Gianopulos said about the role of science fiction in innovation (watch the video at the end of


this post). I think he is right. I remember how I, as a child, would dream about using my “communicator” to talk to friends across the globe and my “replicator” to create fancy desserts; how


I imagined travelling to distant worlds in my spaceship and talking to aliens through my “universal translator”. Look at where we already are. As Rod Rodenberry said to me at the Fox event,


the iPhone is even more advanced than what his father, Gene, had envisaged. Captain Kirk’s communicators didn’t receive emails, browse the web, or play music, after all. 3D printers can now


“replicate” chocolates, human organs, and buildings. This printing technology is in its infancy, but watch what happens later in this decade. And then there is space travel. Elon Musk is


developing not only the Tesla terrestrial sustainable transport vehicle (aka Tesla Roadster), but also spaceships for interplanetary travel using Star Trek-style thrusters (U.S.S. Enterprise


version 1?). Elon plans to retire on Mars. He may well live his dream. As well, will.i.am made intriguing comments about music’s role in innovation. He said that Hollywood was a marriage of


art and science: the science to make the camera work and the art for the script. Silicon Valley hasn’t had its “art marriage” yet, but music has helped it evolve. Music has long spread


ideas and inspired people to create. Will said music was the “spreading of inspiration”, “the first social network”. Will too is right. Steve Jobs, for example, was a huge fan of Bob Dylan


in particular and music in general. This passion may have influenced his decisions to build simple yet powerful music-creation software for the Mac. Try remembering when you heard a special


song for the first time. You won’t be able to, but you’ll sure remember the circumstances—the point being that the art is essential for technology innovation. So let’s give credit where it


is due. We owe a lot to Hollywood. On the flip side, the reason that big Hollywood names like Ashton Kutcher, will.i.am, John Cusack, and Troy Carter (Lady Gaga’s manager and ingenious


strategist) wanted to attend our event is that they know what Silicon Valley has done for them. All the computer-generated effects, novel projection technologies, HD screens, and Dolby and


THX sound systems were built to meet the needs of artists. Equally important, the tools from Silicon Valley have made it far easier to express artistic endeavors for fun and profit. _The


Blair Witch Project_ illustrated that a multimillion-dollar blockbuster could be shot on a camcorder. The relationship between Hollywood and Silicon Valley is, in reality, quite symbiotic —


SOPA and PIPA rage aside. It has to be, because Silicon Valley has yet to inspire great art, and Hollywood has yet to produce great technology. The two communities together, however, have


powered the most important cultural movements of the past century. As Jim Gianopulos noted, the relationship suffers from periodic friction but is hardly a hatefest. In fact, the arts and


entertainment have served as Silicon Valley’s muse for many, many years. Online piracy is an issue that will continue to divide North and South California until solutions are found.


Hollywood doesn’t want its films and music being pirated just as Silicon Valley doesn’t want its intellectual property being stolen. Neither wants the producers of counterfeit goods and fake


drugs selling their wares to unsuspecting consumers. Silicon Valley needs provide the leadership here. It needs to take note of Hollywood’s concerns and rein in the real bad guys. [youtube


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dhb0FfyTehg&w=560&h=315]