Cost Of Information Clues
Prologue - The declining cost of information is a prime driver of economic activity and may soon reverse. Supporting evidence includes skyrocketing energy usage by AI, legal contention over content ownership, pollution of virgin content with AI derivatives. I've had Github public access issues now with Grok and ChatGPT. All cost issues at their core. Other circumstantial evidence:
IT salaries and hiring declining for two years now. Cutbacks in free or low-cost services. AI impacting employment and "triggering" Luddite and denial reactions.
I predicted a final shakeout period back in 2013. It took longer than I expected but right now is probably peak IT. I predict the software industry will stagnate for many years with no "cyclical upturn" like many have learned to expect over the past fifty years. Few employees will understand this sea change and be painfully forced to adapt. Kind of like Democrats right now.
And it's another reason I cashed out of the Pacific Northwest and wrote the Gold Token paper. "Coding" skill is about to lose a lot of value, so my paper focuses on WHY, not HOW, in a niche, under-developed sector. I only need one more low-stress gig for three or four years, free of annoying bumblers and schemers
In 1950, there were 45 States and 0 cryptocurrencies.
In 2000, there were 50 States and a handful of shady crypto rackets.
In 2025, there are 50 States and 25,000 cryptos listed on CoinBase.
The code isn't the value anymore, it's institutional stability.
It's unlikely that even Trump can salvage the current situation, it's a low percentage bet. A State government only needs to establish a limited platform like the Arkansas bill and lay in wait for the blowout. I'll probably add this strategy to the next revision of the Gold Token paper.
"I'm just getting warmed up" - Law Abiding Citizen