Another DOT COM crash? The End Of The Fourth Industrial revolution.
The Fourth Industrial Revolution has been sold as the next great leap in human progress, a fusion of artificial intelligence, robotics, automation, crypto, quantum computing, biotechnology and data systems that will supposedly make society smarter, cleaner, more productive and more efficient.
But what if that promise is built on an illusion?
In this TechEyeSpy episode, we examine the Fourth Industrial Revolution as a top-down project promoted by the World Economic Forum, global institutions, corporate executives, management consultants, technology billionaires and political technocrats. The public story is that AI and automation will benefit everyone. The harder reality is that the gains may concentrate among the companies that control chips, cloud infrastructure, data centres, energy contracts, software platforms and digital payment systems, while ordinary workers, communities and taxpayers carry the cost.
We compare today’s AI, crypto and quantum boom with the dot com bubble. The internet was real, but many internet companies were not durable businesses. The same may now be true of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Artificial intelligence may survive, but many AI stocks may not. Quantum computing may become important, but many quantum companies may be too early for public market investors. Crypto may endure in narrower forms, but much of the token economy may collapse again. Data centres may be essential infrastructure, but they face power, water, planning, financing and community resistance.
This episode also looks at the contradiction between net zero politics and the machine economy. Households are being told to use less energy, change vehicles, change heating systems and accept higher infrastructure costs, while AI data centres, cloud platforms and automation demand vast new electricity supply. Communities are already pushing back against data centre developments over water use, electricity demand, land impact, noise, tax incentives and limited local benefit.
We also discuss universal basic income as a possible political bribe for automation. If AI and robotics weaken the labour market, UBI may be presented as compassion. But a society cannot run forever on displaced workers, concentrated machine ownership and payments designed to keep people passive. People need work, status, ownership, purpose, family stability and local control, not just a basic payment to tolerate their own redundancy.
The central investor question is simple: when the Fourth Industrial Revolution meets its dot com crash, what survives?
The weak names may disappear. The slogans may disappear. The inflated valuations may disappear. But useful AI, real infrastructure, semiconductor equipment, power systems, cooling technology, cybersecurity, industrial automation, data centres with genuine demand and companies that solve real productivity problems may remain.
The future may still be technological, but it will not be the fairy tale version. It will be heavier, more expensive, more regulated, more political and more dependent on energy, water, chips, land, law, engineering, labour and trust than its promoters admitted.
Do not buy the pipe dream.
Study the pipes.