Lily Cole On Impossible.com—her Platform That Aims To Tackle The World’s Most Challenging Issues Through Tech—and How She Thinks Climate Change Is Our Most Pressing Problem...
Q: WHAT INSPIRED YOU TO FOUND IMPOSSIBLE.COM AND WHY IS THE GIFT ECONOMY IDEA SO IMPORTANT TO YOU?
A: I had a simple idea to try and use technology to better connect local communities. I’d been very inspired to learn about gift economies, and how they operate and the social impact gifts can have: we developed an online social network for skill sharing, and grew it to over 100,000 users around the world, before making the technology open-source (it’s called Impossible People). In the journey to build that network, my partner and I developed other social businesses and eventually merged our organizations together... so impossible.com is now an incubator focused on planet-centric design in technology.
Q: HOW DOES IT WORK?
A: Impossible.com is an incubator, with studios in London, Lisbon and San Francisco. We work end-to-end on products, from ideation to design to engineering—mostly software, but sometimes hardware too. Sometimes we develop our own ideas and projects (Wires eyewear, Bond Touch, NikaBot) and sometimes we collaborate with other companies and organisations to build tools for them (i.e. a Tumor Board for Roche or a blockchain book for Google).
Q: WHICH GLOBAL ISSUES MOST CONCERN YOU?
A: I am most concerned by climate change, as I think it’s the issue that will supersede all other issues if we don’t deal with it. I also get quite upset by the plight of refugees, and worry about the increasing number of refugees that climate change is provoking.
Q: DO YOU THINK THERE ARE SOME ISSUES THAT ARE GENUINELY IMPOSSIBLE TO SOLVE?
A: That’s a good question! No, I genuinely believe anything is possible and that most of the things we consider “impossible” are just limits of our imagination. I think seemingly impossible problems are just harder and require an enormous amount of collaboration to achieve.
Q: HOW DID YOU COME UP WITH THE NAME, IMPOSSIBLE. COM?
A: I wrote my university thesis on the concept of possibility and utopias: arguing, in essence, that anything is possible. The first idea for Impossible—to connect people to share for free, in human kindness—seemed impossibly utopian and so it felt like a playful and accurate name. In the end, we stopped investing in the technology to support the gift economy as it didn’t seem to make financial sense any longer, but in the journey we certainly proved it was possible—thousands of people gave freely to strangers, and made new relationships in the process. I formed my own community, too.
Q: WHAT’S NEXT?
A: We just made a film about Mark Boyle, a friend of mine who lived without money for three years, and is now living without any technology or electricity for ecological reasons. We have also developed our own sunglasses line—Wires eyewear—that uses bio plastic and reduces waste through a modular design. We have lots of other projects too, but those are the ones I am most involved in personally.