Quote of the day by Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings: 'Stone Age. Bronze Age. Iron Age. We define entire epics of humanity by the technology they use' — defining a new era for humankind

Reed Hastings
(Image credit: Getty Images/Bloomberg)

Co-founded by Reed Hastings in 1997, Netflix started life as a rental DVD service in the mold of Blockbuster. But, 20 years later, the company dramatically pivoted to being an online streaming service, fully embracing the internet era.


"Stone Age. Bronze Age. Iron Age. We define entire epics of humanity by the technology they use. In fact, technology has been the story of human progress from as long back as we know. In 100 years people will look back on now and say, “That was the Internet Age.""

Changing with the times

Five years after launching Netflix's streaming platform, Hastings was speaking with Forbes on the business' pivot and its role in the emerging internet landscape.

Quote of the day

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This shift, according to reports, was decades in the making, with Hastings plotting it since Netflix's inception, with the DVD rental business a means to grow the customer base.

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His comments highlight the belief that our society is entering a new age defined by the internet and the shift of many businesses from bricks and mortar to an online ecosystem. The comments also frame the new "age" of humanity as transcending the reliance on a particular material – instead basing progress on the shift to the internet.

The new age

This notion is hardly original – plenty of figures in the tech industry have suggested we are graduating to a new age of humanity defined by an idea or material.

For example, physicist Michio Kaku identified several ages in the last few hundred years, including the Steam Age, Age of Electricity, and the Silicon Age that began in the late 20th century and lasted until just recently.

And now? With the constraints of Moore's Law imposing physical limits on computation, he suggested a new age of humanity could belong to quantum – with the embryonic technology of quantum computing allowing us to transcend conventional power constraints. Others, meanwhile, attribute a new age of humanity to AI.


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Keumars Afifi-Sabet
Freelance Contributor

Keumars Afifi-Sabet is a freelance contributor for Tech Radar and the Technology Editor for Live Science. He has written for a variety of publications including ITPro, The Week Digital and ComputerActive. He has worked as a technology journalist for more than five years, having previously held the role of features editor with ITPro. In his previous role, he oversaw the commissioning and publishing of long form in areas including AI, cyber security, cloud computing and digital transformation.

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