Ask HN: How does your job benefit society?
There's a lot of news about privacy violations, wealth equality, filter bubbles and the abundance of advertisements on the internet. I'd love to see some counterpoints about software that truly improves people's lives or the welfare of society. How does hacker news contribute to the general welfare?
10 comments
[ 5.4 ms ] story [ 35.0 ms ] threadWe're building a product where a researcher can type "all of my research on cancer" and will see their life's work unveil in front of their eyes. All the papers, notes, voice memos, everything. And maybe, just maybe it'll spark an idea they would've otherwise missed.
I think the biggest way I can benefit society as a 21 year old is to make a product that enables people to do so. I know I can't solve wealth inequality and cancer all by myself, but I might be able to empower the people who will. I believe this is the greatest power of software.
Some jobs may also enable others to do their jobs more effectively, who may in turn enable someone to benefit the general welfare.
Having a direct, measurable effect is admittedly rather nice, but that isn't the majority of jobs.
On a professional level, I don't feel that I'm necessarily making the world better (at least for now, and with the caveat that I do believe that I am contributing to an increased mean utility), but at least I'm not making it worse (one of the consequences with my last employer is that if we succeeded it would put some people out of work; I left for many reasons but one was that I decided I was no longer comfortable with that).
This job is the best contribution to society that I have ever been a part of, and I'm grateful to have done so.
edit: I should probably be explicit that I don't really feel this has deep redeeming social value, but I thought it might be worth a chuckle.
I put some of my revenue/income towards charitable projects, but I keep much of that private / anonymous. My general philosophy on that comes from two of my favorite books, "Banker To The Poor" by Muhammad Yunus (of Grameen Bank) and "The Billionaire Who Wasn't: How Chuck Feeney Secretly Made and Gave Away a Fortune" by Conor O'Clery.