Rachel Botsman: We've stopped trusting institutions and started trusting strangers
雷切尔·波特曼: 从信任组织机构转向信任陌生人
Rachel Botsman is a recognized expert on how collaboration and trust enabled by digital technologies will change the way we live, work, bank and consume. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
信任这个问题。
是人与人交往的基础,
一个人的时候
(旅行短租网站)中
a host or a guest on Airbnb.
住客的请举手。
(一种电子货币)呢?
if you've ever used Tinder
上找过男女朋友的,
because you're kind of going like this.
因为很多人都不好意思举手。
unknown people, companies and ideas.
陌生的公司以及陌生的点子,
with a company, I should say --
法国的一个网络平台,
很有意思的名字:
drivers and passengers
想要进行长途拼车的
long-distance journeys together.
距离为320千米。
to choose your fellow travelers wisely.
选择你的驴友是非常明智的。
help people make a choice.
网络资料和评论进行选择,
you can see what kind of music they like,
知道他是否吸烟,
their dog along for the ride.
会带着宠物狗一起旅行。
that the key social identifier
人们最关心的问题是:
to talk in the car.
可能会有一个很好的交谈。
to stop talking the entire way
从伦敦直到巴黎的一路上,
that this idea works at all,
因而它大获成功。
most of us were taught as a child:
警告我们的事情正好相反:
搭同一辆车。
more than four million people
在每个月里
that's more passengers
这些乘客数
or JetBlue airlines carry.
“捷蓝航空”的客流量。
of how technology is enabling
证明了科技如何使得
to take a trust leap.
实现一种信任上的跨越。
to do something new or different
新的或与众不同的事物时,
都把眼睛闭上,
with his eyes wide open.
瞪大了眼睛看着我。
我能清楚的看见你,
there exists a gap
你与一个陌生事物之间,
someone you've just met.
是你刚刚认识的某个人,
你从来没去过的地方,
you've never tried before.
没尝试过的事情。
你想跨越这个间隙,
or something unknown,
或者了解那个人,
的动力就是信任。
for our lives to function.
成为我们生存的基石。
to turn the lights out at night.
说的那样,在晚上准时关灯。
who flew me here to keep me safe.
会在飞行中保障我的安全。
about what it really means
在不同的生活环境中,
起着怎样的作用。
contexts of our lives.
hundreds of definitions of trust,
定义有成百上千种,
to some kind of risk assessment
被简化成一种风险评估,
that things will go right.
有多大的可能性是正确的。
对信任的定义。
sound rational and predictable,
是理性的且可预测的。
to the human essence
抓住究竟是人的哪些本性
定义与它们有些不同,
relationship to the unknown.
未知关系的一种自信。
through this lens,
这种角度来审视信任,
why it has the unique capacity
信任会有一种独特的力量,
那种不确定的不安
交付到陌生人手中,
you put your credit card details
当我告诉我的父亲
secondhand Peugeot on eBay,
的标致汽车时,
was "Invisible Wizard"
was not such a good idea.
不能在他这里买。
focuses on how technology
the social glue of society,
so much we do not know.
是我们不知道的。
trust differently in digital environments?
的信任度是一样的吗?
face-to-face translate online?
能找到你的另一半,
to trust finding a ride on BlaBlaCar?
能找到合适的驴友呢?
of networks and marketplaces,
网络软件和商场模式之后,
that people follow,
遵循一个共同的规律,
as an example to bring it to life.
为大家更直观的解释下。
这个想法的可行性,
is safe and worth trying.
是安全且值得一试的。
confidence in the platform,
你要对这个平台有信心,
if something goes wrong.
相信当问题出现时,
using little bits of information
the other person is trustworthy.
值得信任的驴友。
we climb the trust stack,
“信任阶梯”的顶峰。
甚至还有些冒险,
where these ideas seem totally normal.
这些想法是再正常不过的。
change and innovation.
我们改变且不断创新。
and I'd like you to consider,
我希望我们可以一起考虑,
在信任的角度上,
in individuals in society
that trust has only evolved
信任只参与了
throughout the course of human history:
的三个重要环节:
around tight-knit relationships.
亲密的关系之间的。
我和前五排的观众,
he might lend it to me,
的先生可能会借给我。
都会知道我是个骗子,
to do business with me in the future.
and accountability-based.
建立在地区范围之内,
a tremendous amount of change.
经历了巨大的变革,
such as London and San Francisco,
发展迅速的城市地区,
was replaced by large corporations
也被一些大企业而取代,
了解我们每一个人。
and regulation and insurance,
法律规范或者保险一样,
直接信任就减少了很多,
and commission-based.
in institutions and many corporate brands
对于各种机构组织的信任,
and continues to do so.
by major breaches of trust:
的丑闻所震惊着。
的电话入侵事件,
in the Catholic Church,
financial crisis,
can exploit offshore tax regimes.
离岸税收制度逃税漏税的。
道个歉为什么这么难?
that institutional trust isn't working
失去信任的原因很简单,
of dishonest elites,
的所谓的精英们。
这些事,远不止
of the size and structure of institutions.
结构的质疑那么简单。
比如说信任在
以及整个系统之中,
失去的,最后又重建的,
另人兴奋的事,
to have to rethink
with our customers, with our employees,
与客户之间,与雇员之间,
of a leading international hotel brand,
国际顶级酒店集团的
we got onto the topic of Airbnb.
聊到了“空中食宿网”。
that he was perplexed by their success.
这个公司是怎么成功的,
of strangers to trust one another
甚至遍布191个国家。
that I had a confession to make,
我要向他承认一个错误,
do this as well --
的各位也这样做过。
as a guest on Airbnb.
“空中食宿网”订购的民宿。
as a guest on Airbnb
不会这么做,
that they'll be rated by hosts,
会对他们进行评估打分,
are likely to impact their ability
online trust will change our behaviors
改变我们的行为的。
我们以前从未设想过的方式,
我们不再需要酒店了,
的那些组织机构了。
flows through society is changing,
流向已经改变了。
是由上到下流动了,
甚至是反向的。
看不见摸不着的了,
正在不断兴起,
is distributed amongst people
的在人群中兴起
underpinning Bitcoin.
产生的分布式账本创新技术。
the way blockchain works
真正的理解究竟
is it involves processing
就是人们总是,
and hash functions,
以及“散列函数”,
who verify transactions --
by this mysterious person
that hasn't happened yet.
概念都是还没有发生的,
因为我们根本不明白。
试着体会一下,
eloquently described the blockchain
生动的比作为:
of being sure about things.
is imagine the blocks as spreadsheets,
就是将区块链比作表格,
有着丰富的数据。
看做一个不动产契约,
such as the rights to a song.
具有创造性的资产,
to somewhere else,
随之实时转移的。
也有所有记录,
for any kind of third party,
第三方转移他们的需求,
or maybe not a government intermediary
不让政府做中介,
信任层级这个问题上来。
你仍需要相信这个点子,
the other person
是非常巨大的,
the doors to an age of information
一个新的信息时代的大门。
trust on a global scale.
掀起一场信任革命。
intentionally to mention Uber,
不再提起“优步”(打车应用),
that it is a contentious
这是一个有异议,
it's a great case study.
新的信任的领域下,
很好的例子。
of distributed trust.
滥用分散性信任的例子。
and it can go horribly wrong.
而且它们都糟糕到离谱,
protests from taxi associations
在全球范围内的抗议,
based on claims that it is unsafe.
相信“优步”并不安全,
the day that these protests took place,
遇到了抗议的队伍,
一个很巧妙的“推文”。
a British minister for business.
商务大臣马特·汉考克,
#Uber app everyone's talking about?
关于‘优步’的信息?
在讨论这个应用?
我都没有听说过!“
of the trust stack.
that they were trying to eliminate,
的事变得合理化了。
by 850 percent in 24 hours.
的注册人数增加了850%。
around a behavior or an entire sector,
或者整个领域中转变的。
想一下这个例子:
will take a trust leap
500万人跨越信任鸿沟,
the ride-sharing platform,
这个打车应用每天
127辆车载客。
a cross-cultural phenomenon.
跨越文化的现象。
that both drivers and passengers report
司机和乘客都说,
and their rating
in the taxi cab.
出租车上表现的好一些,
but powerful examples
都已经出现很久了,
is creating trust between people
的方式和范围内,
never possible before.
getting into cars driven by strangers.
一个陌生人开的车里,
we swiped right to be matched with.
会刷卡买东西,
with people we do not know.
分享我们的房子,
才只是刚刚开始。
科技的创造性。
understand this new era of trust
信任的这个新领域,
the opportunities to redesign systems
这个机会重塑我们的系统,
inclusive and accountable.
更加兼容也更加值得信任。
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Rachel Botsman - Trust researcherRachel Botsman is a recognized expert on how collaboration and trust enabled by digital technologies will change the way we live, work, bank and consume.
Why you should listen
Rachel Botsman is an author and a visiting academic at the University of Oxford, Saïd Business School. Her work focuses on how technology is enabling trust in ways that are changing the way we live, work, bank and consume. She defined the theory of "collaborative consumption" in her first book, What's Mine Is Yours, which she co-authored with Roo Rogers. The concept was subsequently named by TIME as one of the "10 Ideas that Will Change the World" and by Thinkers50 as the 2015 Breakthrough Idea.
Named a "Young Global Leader" by the World Economic Forum, Botsman examines the growth and challenges of start-ups such as Airbnb, TaskRabbit and Uber. She is regular writer and commentator in leading international publications including the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Harvard Business Review, The Economist, WIRED and more. She is currently writing a new book that explores why the real disruption happening isn’t technology; it’s a profound shift in trust.
Rachel Botsman | Speaker | TED.com