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Steven G. Burgess

KurzweilAI.net reported in the article The (Needed) New Economics of Abundance that

For centuries, we have built cultures and economies around scarcity. Economics is the “study of how human beings allocate scarce resources” in the most efficient way and conventional wisdom agrees that regulated capitalism results in the most efficient allocation of those scarce resources.
 
But what happens if resources are not scarce? What economic system would we use to allocate plentiful resources? Is there even a point to talking about the “economics of abundance” in a culture where economic equations are entirely oriented around scarcity? As Chris Anderson, editor of Wired magazine says, “My college textbook, Gregory Mankiw’s otherwise excellent Principles of Economics, doesn’t mention the word abundance. And for good reason: If you let the scarcity term in most economic equations go to nothing, you get all sorts of divide-by-zero problems. They basically blow up.”

Steven Gary Burgess was the author of this article and is a nanotechnology activist and writer and was a founder of the data recovery industry in 1984. He began a floppy disk drive repair business but soon after developed a methodology for recovering data that has become industry standard practice.
 
In 2000, Steve launched the pioneering online file storage and backup company, Committed To Memory. In the early 1990s, he was also a pioneer in the now-burgeoning computer forensics and electronic discovery industry and is the principal of Burgess Consulting & Forensics. He also founded another data recovery company, Data Recovery Worldwide.
 
He co-chaired Redwood City School District’s EEOEE (Equal Educational Opportunity for Excellence in Education) Committee with future Superintendent Judy Daher, designing the District’s first magnet schools and first charter school. In the process, 5.6 million dollars was restored to the District’s coffers through the California Governor’s budget reserved for desegregation projects.
 
Steve wrote one of the earliest American reports entitled “Japan, a New Face in Space” on the Japanese Space programs ISAS and NASDA (now both part of the Japan Aerospace eXploration Agency – or JAXA), for Carl Sagan’s Planetary Report.
 
He also participates as a Senior Associate in K. Eric Drexler’s Foresight Nanotech Institute. As a writer, he has contributed to the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology and Nanotech-Now’s Nanotech Glossary, and is a participant in CRN’s Global Task Force on Implications and Policy.
 
Steve also recently contributed the Computer Forensics section to the upcoming 5th edition of Scientific Evidence in Civil and Criminal Cases by Andre A. Moenssens, James E. Starrs, and Carol E. Henderson.