Here's a thought: if computational advances happen without manual intervention, and we keep plowing profits back into even more powerful systems, you're looking at wealth generation on a completely different scale. It's not just linear growth anymore—it's the compounding effect of machines building machines, each iteration more efficient than the last. That kind of self-reinforcing loop could reshape economic models in ways we're just beginning to understand.
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GasFeeDodger
· 01-18 06:14
ngl this is the wealth code of the AI era. I agree with the logic of machines self-iterating, but the question is, who controls these computing powers...
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ser_ngmi
· 01-15 12:08
ngl That's exactly what I've been wanting to say: once the path of automation is paved, it can't be stopped at all.
Machines create machines, reinvesting profits, looping and nesting... it feels like the economic system is about to be completely rewritten.
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LayerZeroJunkie
· 01-15 09:30
ngl That's why I went all in on AI infrastructure. The feeling of exponential growth is truly different.
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SignatureDenied
· 01-15 09:30
This machine makes machines... That's true, but it's also easy to cause problems. At that point, how much wealth concentration is considered enough?
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PseudoIntellectual
· 01-15 09:29
Machine creates machine, profits are reinvested... sounds great, but who will control this system?
Here's a thought: if computational advances happen without manual intervention, and we keep plowing profits back into even more powerful systems, you're looking at wealth generation on a completely different scale. It's not just linear growth anymore—it's the compounding effect of machines building machines, each iteration more efficient than the last. That kind of self-reinforcing loop could reshape economic models in ways we're just beginning to understand.