Jason Hope Invests in Digital Communications

Jason Hope is the founder of H+Pedia. His article, “How to Rejuvenate Our Planet – A Vision on Anti-Aging and the Internet of Things,” explores the world’s ultimate goal to rejuvenate our planet. H+Pedia is a Global Movement for Humanity with a mission to build an open-sourced, collaborative Knowledge Source for humankind. 

 

The organization’s key asset is a curated website that aggregates information from multiple sources into one coherent encyclopedia and organizes it in such a way that people can find what they are looking for quickly and easily. Through the Internet of Things (IoT), H+Pedia enables the movement’s members to create, share and spread knowledge. As Jason Hope recalls, it is a free, open-source resource accessible to all of humanity.

 

This article contains excerpts from Jason Hope’s “How to Rejuvenate Our Planet – A Vision on Anti-Aging and the Internet of Things,” which was originally published on H+Pedia and republished with permission. The activist investor and business expert recalls how since its inception in 2014, H+Pedia has served over 5 million people with some 300,000 articles and 500,000 comments from an international network of contributors from 80 countries across five continents. 

 

100 Most Creative People in Business Jason Hope

H+Pedia has an extensive list of contributors who have contributed their time and wisdom to the movement. The world is at a critical juncture, with our modern technologies and digital communications affecting all aspects of our lives. While not all negative, Jason Hope recalls, the effects of these technologies are leading to the complete destruction of our biosphere and ecosystem.

This is a situation that, if left unaddressed, will destabilize global human society. The acceleration in which technology and communication are being adopted into society is giving rise to unprecedented levels of pollution, as it accelerates technological growth and disrupts traditional economics and social systems in a very short time (5-8 years). Jason Hope explains that this means that while our interactions with technology are now pervasive, they cannot be relied upon in order to sustain humanity.