2.1 Accelerating Automation, Concentrated Profits
Artificial intelligence is no longer confined to laboratories or limited to digital interfaces. It is now embedded in the physical world, powering machines that perceive, decide, and act without human intervention. In warehouses, AI systems manage inventory and orchestrate logistics with near-perfect efficiency. On roads, autonomous vehicles navigate traffic, make deliveries, and transport passengers with growing precision. In offices, algorithms write code, generate reports, and analyze complex data at speeds no human can match.
This technological leap is not speculative. It is operational. Autonomous systems are already deployed at scale across multiple industries. Robotaxis are completing millions of rides. Warehouses are running on robotic coordination. Retail and logistics workflows are increasingly touchless and self-managed.
But while the machines scale, the wealth they generate remains locked within a narrow circle of owners. Profits flow to large corporations and institutional investors that own the fleets, facilities, and underlying technology. These entities are not just building the infrastructure — they are controlling the economic upside.
The challenge is clear: the assets driving this transformation are high-barrier, complex, and capital-intensive. Autonomous vehicle fleets, AI-operated facilities, and advanced robotics require significant upfront investment, regulatory expertise, and operational capability. For most individuals, direct ownership is simply out of reach.
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