Emad Mostaque proposes a new digital currency where mining is replaced by dedicating compute to public-good AI projects like cancer research. The value of the "Foundation Coin" is backed by its direct contribution to human benefit, creating an incentive structure for building aligned, open-source AI infrastructure.
As AI agents become sophisticated, they'll need to pay for services. Traditional banking is too slow and fragmented for them. Crypto, as the internet's native money, provides the instant, global, low-fee rails for AI agents to transact with each other and with web services, creating a major new use case.
Emad Mostaque argues that the math for a tax-funded Universal Basic Income (UBI) doesn't work. Providing even a poverty-level UBI in the U.S. would cost $5 trillion, the entire federal tax base. Corporate taxes from AI giants wouldn't come close, necessitating a fundamental rethinking of how money is created and distributed.
The massive demand for GPUs from the crypto market provided a critical revenue stream for companies like NVIDIA during a slow period. This accelerated the development of the powerful parallel processing hardware that now underpins modern AI models.
As large AI models exhaust public training data, they need novel sources. Crypto provides a powerful solution by creating financial incentives for a global, distributed workforce to collect specific data (e.g., first-person video for robotics). This creates a new market where the demand side from AI companies is nearly guaranteed.
Bitcoin miners have inadvertently become a key part of the AI infrastructure boom. Their most valuable asset is not their hardware but their pre-existing, large-scale energy contracts. AI companies need this power, forcing partnerships that make miners a valuable pick-and-shovel play on AI.
The most profound innovations in history, like vaccines, PCs, and air travel, distributed value broadly to society rather than being captured by a few corporations. AI could follow this pattern, benefiting the public more than a handful of tech giants, especially with geopolitical pressures forcing commoditization.
OpenAI's non-profit parent retains a 26% stake (worth $130B) in its for-profit arm. This novel structure allows the organization to leverage commercial success to generate massive, long-term funding for its original, non-commercial mission, creating a powerful, self-sustaining philanthropic engine.
The massive OpenAI-Oracle compute deal illustrates a novel form of financial engineering. The deal inflates Oracle's stock, enriching its chairman, who can then reinvest in OpenAI's next funding round. This creates a self-reinforcing loop that essentially manufactures capital to fund the immense infrastructure required for AGI development.
Successful crypto projects will move beyond pure financial utility. By building in social components (community identity) and emotional components (contributing to a social good), they can build the trust and narrative strength needed to stand out in a crowded market.
For AI agents to be truly autonomous and valuable, they must participate in the economy. Traditional finance is built for humans. Crypto provides the missing infrastructure: internet-native money, a way for AI to have a verifiable identity, and a trustless system for proving provenance, making it the essential economic network for AI.