I think it's possible to create other crypto properties (than bitcoin). Saylor

Car Companies Are Tracking You and Selling Your Data - YouTube
Car insurance companies raising rates.
People are unaware they agreed to hve their cars give that data, and the companies are selling the data. They don't know what info was sold, how much, to whom? The companies offer to lower the rate you pay in exchange for this data. That part is voluntary, but besides that in the cars there tracking technologies that know everywhere you went, where you buy certain things, the range of your territory. Facial geometric features, behavioural characteristics, biological characteristics, sex life, genetic data, religeons, philosopical beliefs, are all possible to get.
If you don't authorize the collection, your infotainment center doesn't work, or whatever. You can't opt out of it.
Passengers and individuals outside the vehicle also.
Consumers are in the dark about this.
Commenter: ’Insurance companies are not using this to AFFECT your rates, they're using it to RAISE your rates.'
The state governments also know everything about you and sells your data. It seems weird but hasn't been challenged.
Ed Markey, senator, wrote a letter about it.
General Motors sells detailed driver logs without your consent - YouTube

The closest to a science fiction government is Singapore. Large investments coupled with technocratic, technological literacy. UK in the 1940s, with radar and computers, speed of breakthroughs. Rest of nations, scientific spending is by consensus, cutting a check for superconventional non-objectional things built in China.
What China could build for us.

AI Agents Take the Wheel: Devin, SIMA, Figure 01 and The Future of Jobs - YouTube
SIMA robots. AIs that train on some things have capabilities in other applications.
Also Figure 1, the dishwashing robot.
'No one is really in control.'
Sam Altman and Jensen Huang both say AGI will surpass all tasks in 5 years.
Garbage companies and farms, anyone?

Tesla is the worst performing stock in the S&P and in the Nasdaq since January.

Costco does no innovation, changes nothing, and is up 250% in a couple years. Why isn't anyone copying this model?