12 lines
1.6 KiB
JSON
12 lines
1.6 KiB
JSON
{
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"HubID": "5691",
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"Date": "01/03/2026",
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"HubTags": ["External Platform Posts", "Future Map"],
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"Contacts": ["contact1", "contact2"],
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"Companies": "",
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"File": "",
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"Image": "",
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"Summary": "This is a hard truth that has not yet fully sunk in. For most people who spent decades—and substantial money, including me—accumulating education, knowledge, and experience, much of that advantage is approaching rapid decay. Not because it lacked value historically, but because AI will soon be better. We can already forecast AI capability a few years out with reasonable confidence simply by looking at semiconductor orders today. The trajectory is clear: intelligence likely becomes abundant and nearly free by 2030. The best expert in almost any domain will be available 24/7 for the cost of a streaming subscription. When intelligence is no longer scarce, it stops being a durable advantage. That raises the uncomfortable question: if what we know no longer differentiates us, how do we create value? The answer is that value shifts away from knowledge and toward ownership of productive assets. Energy production. Microchips. Servers. Compute. Robots. Proprietary data. Real estate. These are the assets that determine who wins in the AI era. It will no longer be primarily about how educated you are, how experienced you are, or how long you’ve been doing something. This transition will be a profound shock for those who are not preparing. The window to reposition is still open—but it is closing. https://x.com/benitoz/status/2005349615823183897",
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"Notes": ""
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}
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