Google’s offer to redevelop the Toronto waterfront as a smart city of the future prompts the question: is Google’s future the one that we want?

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It’s obvious what Alphabet/Google would get from such a deal. Much as it is presently a gatekeeper for almost all of the internet that is not on Facebook, and so able to extract rents from any company that wants to be seen there, it would become the gatekeeper for those parts of the physical world that it controlled. Anyone who wanted to do business in the shiny new parts of cities that Alphabet controlled and built would end up paying for the privilege.

The benefits on the other side of the bargain are less attractive. For the cities there is the promise of money now in exchange for power and income foregone in the future – a bargain like a payday loan – but the humiliating scramble of North American cities to house Amazon’s second headquarters shows that some at least will offer almost any incentive to be associated with high technology. Newark, New Jersey, has offered tax breaks worth $7bn to attract Amazon and even that may not be enough. The prestige gained now will be paid off for years in foregone revenues.

For the citizens, there’s nothing much in these deals. There is no guarantee that they will benefit from the further refinement and processing of the data they produce, and Google collects, any more than they do at present. Nor will many of them benefit from the new developments: how much have Londoners who do not work there benefited from Canary Wharf? Cities are at their best living expressions of a raucous and conflicted democracy. They are not mausoleums to ideologies of complete control, whether these are political or commercial. This point is wider than just Google or Amazon. Silicon Valley itself is a physical area as well as an ideology, and the phenomenal sums of money that have accumulated there have made life worse for those not at the top of the heap; housing becomes unaffordable, public transport and schooling are neglected; the city becomes a playground for the few and not the many.

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