An engineer I know and respect a great deal believes things like that can't really be attributed/blamed on any individual. His perspective: humans are, by nature, inventors. We create before we analyze our creations. He makes this argument about nuclear weapons: he believes they were inevitable. I'm sure he would say the same thing about the algorithm form of marketing. It's an interesting world view.
As a history buff I can say without a doubt that his is absolutely true.
The US Atomic program (what became the Manhattan Project) got started largely because Einstein sent a letter to FDR that basically said "Hey, you really need to look at this because the Germans are WAY ahead of you on it and if it is successful it is a complete game-changer.
The Manhattan Project borrowed HEAVILY from the British Atomic project which was WAY ahead of ours circa 1941/42 and also benefitted immensely from a ton of other European scientists who fled the Nazi's because they were Jewish. This also substantially hurt the German Atomic program since they chased off a substantial portion of their best scientists.
The French, Italians, Soviets, and Japanese also had atomic research programs before and during the war. That is just off the top of my head, I'm sure there were others as well. It was absolutely inevitable that someone would eventually figure out how to split atoms and make a really big boom.
A couple side notes:
I've visited the Trinity site. That was the site of the first atomic explosion. We are coming up on the 80th anniversary of that occurrence. At 5:29 am local time on July 16, 1945 "Gadget" was detonated in the New Mexico desert not far from Alamogordo, NM. The site is only open a couple days a year which is actually very good because rather than just driving by and snapping a picture of a sign that says "Trinity test happened here" they really do up a major presentation. There are scientists and historians and a bus tour to the ranch where they put the thing together and you learn a lot about it.
One of the most fascinating stories of WWII is the story of Moe Berg being assigned to attend a lecture in Zurich (neutral Switzerland) by German Atomic Scientist Werner Heisenberg.
I have to back up and explain Moe Berg because the guy is flat out fascinating. He was a professional baseball player in the 1920's and 1930's playing catcher for the Brooklyn Robins (later became the Brooklyn Dodgers), Chicago White Sox, Cleveland Indians, Washington Senators, and Boston Red Sox. Far from the stereotype of a dumb jock, he was a genius who had graduated magna cum laude from Princeton. Anyway, during the war he wanted to be involved despite being in his 40's and too old to begin traditional military service. He eventually joined OSS (Office of Strategic Services, forerunner of the CIA) and worked on a project to capture and interrogate Italian rocket and missile scientists. In order to do this effectively, Berg had to be smart enough to understand the research.
In November of 1944 Berg was sent to Heisenberg's lecture in Zurich with orders to shoot and kill Heisenberg if anything that Heisenberg said led him to believe that the Germans were close to a bomb. Berg correctly deduced that the Germans were nowhere close to a bomb and thus did not kill Heisenberg.
If you didn't already get this from reading the previous paragraph, think about it for a minute. A US OSS officer was sent into a neutral country with orders to KILL a foreign scientist. That is a MASSIVE violation of International Law and local law and just about everything else. Had Berg actually killed Heisenberg he may well have been executed by the Swiss for murder. I explain that to explain that the US did not undertake this operation lightly. It was, however, that important that if the Germans were anywhere close to a Bomb, they HAD to be stopped.
I think the best quote about Berg to explain him is that late in the war he was assigned to go to Italy and recruit the head of the Italian supersonic research program, Antonio Ferri. When Berg (a former MLB Catcher) returned with Ferri, FDR commented "I see that Moe Berg is still catching very well."