Philosophy of Dr. Gorog

Man’s most valuable asset is the creative mind; our country underwent a unique experiment in human history, where creative thinking men set up a system of individual rights based on the concept of the individual at the center of ownership of their faculties, their property, and their ideas. At the time, all those centered on the physical, their physical person, their tangible property, and their orated venue speeches or documented ideas. In this age where both individuals and organizations are transitioning to an entirely digital presence, the new digital era requires the same incite as our founding fathers had for physical individual rights and freedoms applied to virtual processes, data products, human interactions, and transactions. Because each of us realizes this in some semblance on a personal level, we know some action is required, but what? Even though people may not be able to fully grasp the nature of the problem or see the full scope, which is obscured in the rapidly evolving and mostly conceptual virtual environment, we want to know where to direct our efforts and what they should concentrate on. The teaching and life philosophy of Dr. Gorog is centered on pursuit of digital era rights which will endow humans with computer age freedom using technology to empower unintrusive enforcement of digital rights. His relentless pursuit focuses on post digital transformation era and the application of virtual trust and digital privacy, because these are the missing pieces of the equation leading to an answer to the question of how the individual will inter-relate to and within this new paradigm of mostly virtual human existence.

In the final episode of the eight-part series, Tim provides a direct inquisitive dialog with Dr. Gorog’s regarding his dissertation work in distributed trust.
In this episode, we will continue on the next-generation post digital transformation philosophy looking at the lifecycle of our data.
In the digital world, we are getting to the point where Eighty Percent of peoples’ entire lives work effort is virtual, and this is just going to grow.
In this episode, we discuss the nature of newly evolving open markets in comparison to human historical examples of frontiers.
Our discussion focuses on the nature of disruption in any market, identifying the critical result of disruption is a change of philosophy.
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