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Yes. I'm just asking a naughty-ish question, because I somewhat feel that this ignores the people that are underprivileged and focuses on the relatively privileged.

If the dividing line of privilege will become "those who invested in AI, and those who didn't", then the world as we know it is over, because stonks generally don't put bread on the table and the moment you sell them (or even take a loan out against them that you can only do once) you have lost your privilege.

So there must be a better way. And it's probably not finance, but skills? It's sort-of always been about skills, because those are what enable people to make the income side higher and beat the expense side: by adding value. Your kids won't get rich from inheritance because that's the first thing that will get taxed to oblivion in a world of extremes. What they cannot tax are the skills you will help them build.

And perhaps, AI - especially the current generation of GenAI - can help with attaining skills. After all, for a mere 8GB, we can already today have a local model that can tell you how to connect electrical wires, how to build software, how to service your appliances, how to mix a cocktail, how to build a foundation for a home, and so on...