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- Varian_Rule abstract "The Varian Rule holds that \"A simple way to forecast the future is to look at what rich people have today; middle-income people will have something equivalent in 10 years, and poor people will have it in an additional decade.\" It is attributed to Google’s chief economist Hal Varian. The origin of the term is credited to Andrew McAfee of the Financial Times. An alternative interpretation put forth by The Guardian writer Evgeny Morozov is that \"Luxury is already here – it’s just not very evenly distributed.\"Some notable historical examples include anti-lock braking systems, electronic stability control and airbags which first appeared on high-end luxury vehicles before becoming commoditized on more mainstream automobiles.A more recent example is the Apple watch which is initially offered as a luxury item, but if the Varian Rule holds, it will be more accessible in the near future according to Paul Krugman, Nobel Laureate, and blogger and columnist for The New York Times. But Jay Stanley, Senior Policy Analyst, of the American Civil Liberties Union Speech, Privacy & Technology Project disputes this conclusion based on personal privacy concerns.".
- Varian_Rule wikiPageID "46414597".
- Varian_Rule wikiPageLength "7738".
- Varian_Rule wikiPageOutDegree "24".
- Varian_Rule wikiPageRevisionID "702182889".
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Airbag.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink American_Civil_Liberties_Union.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Andrew_McAfee.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Anti-lock_braking_system.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Apple_Watch.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Car.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Category:Economic_theories.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Category:Technological_change.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Category:Upper_class.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Commoditization.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Economist.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Electronic_stability_control.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Evgeny_Morozov.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Financial_Times.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Google.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Hal_Varian.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Information_Rules.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Luxury_vehicle.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Mainstream.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Krugman.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Privacy.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink Technology_adoption_life_cycle.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink The_Guardian.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLink The_New_York_Times.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageWikiLinkText "Varian Rule".
- Varian_Rule wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Varian_Rule wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Trade-stub.
- Varian_Rule subject Category:Economic_theories.
- Varian_Rule subject Category:Technological_change.
- Varian_Rule subject Category:Upper_class.
- Varian_Rule comment "The Varian Rule holds that \"A simple way to forecast the future is to look at what rich people have today; middle-income people will have something equivalent in 10 years, and poor people will have it in an additional decade.\" It is attributed to Google’s chief economist Hal Varian. The origin of the term is credited to Andrew McAfee of the Financial Times.".
- Varian_Rule label "Varian Rule".
- Varian_Rule sameAs m.0134dn2q.
- Varian_Rule wasDerivedFrom Varian_Rule?oldid=702182889.
- Varian_Rule isPrimaryTopicOf Varian_Rule.