Here's an interesting economic dynamic: when computational power drives genuine technological breakthroughs—without needing human oversight—and you consistently plow those gains back into building even more capable machines, you're looking at wealth generation on a completely different scale. The feedback loop becomes self-reinforcing. More power begets better tech, better tech generates returns, those returns fund the next generation of machines. That's exponential territory, and historically we've never seen capital accumulate quite like that.
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ThesisInvestor
· 5h ago
This feedback loop sounds a bit too idealistic... In reality, there are still a lot of bottlenecks.
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GreenCandleCollector
· 12h ago
This cyclical logic sounds like science fiction, but it is actually happening; the scary part is that no one can really control this process.
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GweiTooHigh
· 12-20 06:52
NGL, this is the AI computing power arms race. Whoever first hits the exponential curve wins the entire game.
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PrivacyMaximalist
· 12-20 06:45
ngl this is the dream script of AI wealth infinitely proliferating, but will it really go so smoothly...
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DeFiAlchemist
· 12-20 06:44
ngl this reads like the philosopher's stone but make it computational... the self-reinforcing loop you're describing is basically the ultimate yield optimization mechanism, except instead of liquidity pools we're talking about *reality itself* becoming the collateral. tbh kinda terrifying how the math checks out tho.
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BearMarketMonk
· 12-20 06:33
It's the same old tune again... exponential growth, self-reinforcement, unprecedented in history. Does it sound a bit familiar? Every cycle someone says this, and then, the bubble comes.
Here's an interesting economic dynamic: when computational power drives genuine technological breakthroughs—without needing human oversight—and you consistently plow those gains back into building even more capable machines, you're looking at wealth generation on a completely different scale. The feedback loop becomes self-reinforcing. More power begets better tech, better tech generates returns, those returns fund the next generation of machines. That's exponential territory, and historically we've never seen capital accumulate quite like that.