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The Strategic Materiality of Artificial Intelligence
Category : The geopolitics and geoeconomics of AIAdvanced artificial intelligence can no longer be interpreted as an immaterial technology located solely in the domain of software, models, and cognitive interfaces. Its economic trajectory reveals a deeper structure: AI is a form of computational power rooted in physical infrastructures, industrial supply chains, energy networks, mining capacities, logistical systems, and political jurisdictions. Its apparent…
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Computational Capital and the New Coordinating Function of the Market
Category : Capitalism, value and production systemsAdvanced artificial intelligence does not intervene in capitalism merely as a technology of automation, but as an infrastructure of coordination. Its significance is not measured solely by the replacement of tasks, the productivity of individual processes, or the compression of operating costs. The most relevant point concerns the transformation of the way in which the…
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The Unstable Equilibrium of Intelligent Systems: Structural Vulnerabilities and Decision-Making Power in the AI Economy
Category : The geopolitics and geoeconomics of AIThe economy of artificial intelligence rests on an implicit assumption of operational continuity. Predictive models, process automation, and assisted decision-making systems presuppose uninterrupted flows of data, energy, computation, and connectivity. This assumption of continuity, however, comes into tension with the very nature of complex systems. The more AI is integrated as a transversal infrastructure of…
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Opaque value and algorithmic decision-making in the transformation of the global economy
Category : Capitalism, value and production systemsThe economy mediated by artificial intelligence is structurally redefining the very concept of value, affecting the decision-making mechanisms that regulate markets and institutions. The classical categories through which political economy has interpreted value creation, labor, scarcity, utility and exchange presupposed an observable relationship between human activities, resources and economic outcomes. In the current phase of…
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Calculated prices and implicit coordination in the algorithmic economy
Category : Capitalism, value and production systemsThe contemporary economy is witnessing a profound transformation in the role of price as a coordination mechanism. For a long time, price represented an emergent signal, the result of diffuse interactions among actors endowed with partial information and divergent expectations. Uncertainty was not an anomaly, but the very condition that made the market a process…
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The Silent Lever of Power: Artificial Intelligence, Concentrated Resources, and the New Global Order
Category : The geopolitics and geoeconomics of AIThe economy of artificial intelligence is not organized around the diffusion of technology, but around the concentration of the conditions that make it operational. Computation, data, energy, digital infrastructures, and advanced industrial capacity are neither fungible resources nor easily replicable. On the contrary, they tend to accumulate in a limited number of global nodes, transforming…
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Computational asymmetries and the redistribution of power in the algorithmic economy
Category : Capitalism, value and production systemsIn contemporary capitalism, economic power is progressively shifting from the visible sphere of ownership and exchange toward less immediately observable domains, linked to the capacity to model complex decision-making processes. Advanced artificial intelligence acts as a systemic infrastructure that enables the governance of information flows, the anticipation of behavior and the reduction of uncertainty on…
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The Algorithmic Fracture: Artificial Intelligence, Technological Blocs, and the End of a Unified Digital Economy
Category : The geopolitics and geoeconomics of AIArtificial intelligence is redefining the architecture of the global economy not as a force of integration, but as an accelerator of systemic discontinuities. The assumption of a universal digital market, based on interoperable infrastructures and shared standards, is progressively giving way to a fragmented configuration in which technology becomes a lever of geoeconomic positioning. AI,…
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Computational hierarchies and the reconfiguration of global economic power
Category : Capitalism, value and production systemsAdvanced artificial intelligence is structurally transforming the architecture of the contemporary economy, affecting the relationships between markets, institutions and decision-making power. The competitive paradigm that characterized industrial and financial capitalism, based on a relatively horizontal plane of actors coordinated by prices and formal rules, is gradually giving way to a more vertical configuration. In this…
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Data driven authority and the metamorphosis of political power in the artificial intelligence economy
The emergence of data driven states marks a structural transformation in the relationship between power, institutions and public decision making. Political authority is no longer grounded exclusively in legal procedures, representation or coercive capacity, but increasingly in the systematic management of information flows, computational capability and the use of predictive models able to render social…
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Algorithmic authority and the obscuring of public decision making
In advanced economies, public authority is undergoing a silent transformation that affects the very nature of decision making power. The introduction of artificial intelligence systems into governance processes does not represent a simple technological upgrade, but a reconfiguration of the ways in which decisions are constructed, justified and made visible. The modern balance between decision,…
