In the neon-drenched waters of the South China Sea, the megatrend wasn't crypto or AI. It was salvage-ware .
Piracy wasn’t about stealing things anymore. It was about redirecting the rivers of information. And Captain Reyes knew, as she lit a cheap clove cigarette and watched the megaship disappear, that the true megatrend had never been possession. It was access .
The sea was silent. The vault was full. And the old pirate smiled.
The Ever Given class of mega-container ships didn't just carry iPhones and soybeans. They carried the world's computational slack—stacked petabytes of encrypted "dark cargo": entertainment algorithms, proprietary gene-prints, and forgotten social media archives. In a world where raw compute cost more than uranium, a single container of high-density storage could buy a small island.
In the neon-drenched waters of the South China Sea, the megatrend wasn't crypto or AI. It was salvage-ware .
Piracy wasn’t about stealing things anymore. It was about redirecting the rivers of information. And Captain Reyes knew, as she lit a cheap clove cigarette and watched the megaship disappear, that the true megatrend had never been possession. It was access .
The sea was silent. The vault was full. And the old pirate smiled.
The Ever Given class of mega-container ships didn't just carry iPhones and soybeans. They carried the world's computational slack—stacked petabytes of encrypted "dark cargo": entertainment algorithms, proprietary gene-prints, and forgotten social media archives. In a world where raw compute cost more than uranium, a single container of high-density storage could buy a small island.