| Most of tech still operates on domination game rules: zero-sum competition, finite chances, survival-based motivation. But there's a fundamentally different game with better outcomes for everyone. *Domination Game (what we inherited):* - Zero-sum: Your success requires my failure
- Finite attempts: "Game over" scenarios, no retries
- Fear-based: Motivated by survival, threat avoidance
- Competitive: Players positioned against each other *Liberty Game (what actually works better):* - Positive-sum: Your success enables my success
- Unlimited retries: Mistakes become learning, no permanent failure
- Enjoyment-based: Motivated by optimization and satisfaction
- Cooperative: Mutual support creates better outcomes for everyone *The "Only Winners" principle:* In a properly structured cooperative system, individual optimization requires collective optimization. Success multiplies rather than being scarce. Network effects mean each person's improvement enhances everyone's capacity. *Observable in practice:* - Open source: Your contribution improves the tool for everyone, including you
- Research: Shared knowledge accelerates everyone's discovery
- Standards: Interoperability benefits all implementers
- Learning communities: Teaching others deepens your own understanding *The unlimited retries advantage:* Traditional systems punish mistakes with "game over" scenarios. But continuous learning systems integrate every attempt into accumulated capability. Each retry is informed by all previous experience—not repetition, but evolution. *Why "enjoy and good luck" matters:* When mutual encouragement is genuine (not competitive pleasantries), it creates sustainable cooperation. Pleasure-based participation outperforms fear-based compliance over time. *The transition:* You don't need permission to play the liberty game. Approach interactions for mutual benefit. Celebrate others' success. Treat challenges as learning opportunities. Share knowledge freely. The domination game is optional. The liberty game is available now. |