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Almost nothing new here that hasn't been covered aggressively elsewhere for years (e.g., economists thinking about automation, and early 'intelligence' automation long predating LLMs) but the "reprisals" section is interesting, and I think crypto types may have something to contribute on that topic area due to the proximate reprisals on currency and finance-related disruption.
This kind of game theoretic analysis / discussion is woefully under-represented in this space, imo. I know I keep saying that but it keeps being true. Maybe the Saylor debate will finally kick it in the ass hard enough for something besides hopium farts to emerge.
I was just going to say this. Reflecting on this post I don't see anything new. I think I've even heard the government aspect. But really that isn't new either. The Nazi's had computers that allowed them to be more efficient in their "work". The US has the NSA which allows them to spy on the world. Its an arms race same as it ever was. I will always bet on the free market and open source over the state in the long run.
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