---
id: "entity-e-glen-weyl"
type: "entity"
entityType: "person"
canonicalName: "E. Glen Weyl"
aliases: ["Glen Weyl"]
source_timestamps: ["byline", "Readers Also Viewed These Items"]
tags: ["author", "economist", "speaker"]
related: ["entity-raul-castro-fernandez", "framework-cmo-compensation", "contrarian-ubi-alternative"]
speakers: ["E. Glen Weyl"]
sources: ["tail1"]
isSpeakerEntity: true
---
## Segment 1 — tail1

## Article 109 — a109

# E. Glen Weyl

## Profile

Economist and **co-author** of the source article. E. Glen Weyl co-founded and leads the **RadicalxChange Foundation**, the **Plurality Institute**, the **Faith, Family, and Technology Network**, and the **Microsoft Research Plural Technology Collaboratory**. He is coauthor of *Radical Markets* and *Plurality*.

## Role in this source

One of the two authorial voices (with [[entity-raul-castro-fernandez|Raul Castro Fernandez]]). Weyl supplies the economic-theory backbone: the [[concept-equimarginal-principle]], the [[concept-per-model-operating-profit|operating-profit]] financial base, and the institutional design of the [[concept-collective-management-organizations|CMO]].

## Attributed contributions in this vault

- Core proposal: [[framework-cmo-compensation|The 3-Step Data Compensation Framework]]
- Contrarian theses: [[contrarian-data-valuation-possible]], [[contrarian-data-compensation-as-investment]], [[contrarian-ubi-alternative]]
- Co-authored quotes: [[quote-data-valuation-objection]], [[quote-investment-not-tax]], [[quote-equimarginal-principle]]

## Intellectual antecedent

**Enrichment note:** Weyl's prior *"data as labor"* work — arguing that recognizing users' productive role could correct unequal value distribution and platforms' monopsony power — is the **direct antecedent** to this article's compensation proposal (see the Adjacent Literature section of [[00-index/moc|the MOC]]).