| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
Alfred Marshall
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Academic theoretical |
5
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1 | |
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person
Alfred Marshall
|
Academic professional |
5
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1 | |
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person
Network Theorists
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Academic influence |
5
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1 | |
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person
Author
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Intellectual reference |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Publication of 'Increasing Returns and the World of Business' by Brian Arthur. | Harvard Business Review | View |
This page (175) appears to be from a strategic policy paper or manuscript discussing the concept of 'Hard Gatekeeping' in international relations and cyber security. It argues for a system where nations must adhere to certain standards (like IPv6 or nuclear non-proliferation) to benefit from inclusion in 'American gatekept systems.' It cites Brian Arthur's power-law dynamics and references historical precedents like the Thirty Years War to argue against forced inclusion while maintaining strategic exclusivity.
This document appears to be page 164 from a book or academic text included in a House Oversight investigation (marked HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018396). It discusses the geopolitical trend of increasing border walls/fences between 2000-2014 and transitions to discussing the risks of global pandemics in an interconnected world, quoting Bill Gates from 2015 regarding the high probability of a future infectious disease outbreak. While labeled an Epstein-related document by the user, this specific page contains general geopolitical analysis and does not mention Epstein directly.
This document appears to be page 161 from a book or academic text discussing network theory, 'power law distributed' systems, and the growth strategies of tech giants like Facebook (specifically the 'seven friends in ten days' metric). It references works by Chamath Palihapitiya, Brian Arthur, and Albert-Lazlo Barabási. While labeled with a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, indicating it is part of a congressional investigation cache, the text itself discusses sociological and economic theories behind social media dominance rather than specific criminal activities.
This document appears to be a page (p. 159) from a book or detailed report submitted as evidence to the House Oversight Committee (Bates stamp 018391). The text discusses economic theory, contrasting the 'diminishing returns' of traditional industrial markets (citing Henry Ford and auto manufacturing) with the 'increasing returns' and 'winner takes all' dynamics of the information age and software markets. It heavily quotes economist Brian Arthur's 1996 Harvard Business Review article on the subject.
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