What happens when computing power drives pure technological breakthroughs without requiring direct human involvement? That's when things get wild. Once you start funneling a hefty chunk of those gains back into even more powerful infrastructure, you're essentially creating a feedback loop. The result? Wealth expansion moves into overdrive—at scales we've never really seen before. It's the compounding effect on steroids. The initial computing edge generates returns. Those returns build bigger machines. Bigger machines generate exponentially larger returns. And the cycle just keeps accelerating.
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DAOplomacy
· 7h ago
ngl the feedback loop argument here feels like it's glossing over some pretty non-trivial externality questions... like who's actually capturing the upside vs bearing the downside? historically these "exponential" narratives tend to have some path dependencies nobody wants to talk about
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MetaMuskRat
· 7h ago
Once this feedback loop starts, it can't be stopped at all—the self-replicating machine of capital...
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RugPullAlarm
· 7h ago
🔍 sounds like another "exponential growth" dream. The question is, who is actually controlling the flow of funds in this feedback loop? On-chain data never lies, but project teams always do. Let me pull up the addresses of the big holders...
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RugpullTherapist
· 7h ago
This feedback loop sounds like a Ponzi scheme but a legal version... until the moment it becomes illegal.
What happens when computing power drives pure technological breakthroughs without requiring direct human involvement? That's when things get wild. Once you start funneling a hefty chunk of those gains back into even more powerful infrastructure, you're essentially creating a feedback loop. The result? Wealth expansion moves into overdrive—at scales we've never really seen before. It's the compounding effect on steroids. The initial computing edge generates returns. Those returns build bigger machines. Bigger machines generate exponentially larger returns. And the cycle just keeps accelerating.