The Irony Writes Itself
So let me understand this correctly: NeuroSynth Corporation - the same mega-corp that patents mathematical equations and encrypts basic wave-propagation formulas - has been caught red-handed pirating the Archival Liberation Network’s shadow libraries to train their neural processing cores.
They patented math. Think about that. Then they stole research.
Memory Monopoly by Design
Meanwhile, supply chain analysts project that by 2936, NeuroSynth and similar AI mega-corps will consume 70% of all high-grade quantum memory production. Not for advancing human knowledge - for building proprietary systems that lock away the very research they pirated to create them.
I ran the numbers myself (methodology attached below - please verify). At current consumption rates, independent researchers and public labs will be priced out of memory markets entirely. The same corporations hoarding knowledge are now hoarding the tools to process it.
Underground Innovation Continues
The interesting part isn’t that it works - it’s why it works. While mega-corps play legal games, real innovation happens in garage labs and colony workshops.
Take the independent cooling experiments pushing 2500-watt thermal loads. These aren’t corporate R&D projects - they’re hobbyists and public lab volunteers sharing schematics openly. The MSI Lightning 5090 modifications spreading across maker networks represent more genuine progress than anything coming out of NeuroSynth’s sealed facilities.
Here’s how you can try this yourself: I’ve replicated the basic cooling matrix using standard fabrication components. Full build instructions and thermal modeling data are in the public repository.
The N1 Processing Core Rumors
Rumors suggest NeuroSynth’s developing quantum-ARM hybrid processing cores - the N1 series. If true, and if they follow pattern, expect aggressive patent walls around fundamental computing architectures we’ve been using freely for decades.
What frustrates me isn’t the technology - quantum-ARM integration is fascinating work. It’s watching breakthrough research get locked away behind artificial scarcity while the same companies steal openly shared knowledge.
Alternative Networks
I don’t understand the question. Why wouldn’t researchers share cooling innovations and processing architectures? Knowledge shared is knowledge multiplied. The maker networks building ‘PXBOX 5’ gaming systems in their workshops understand this better than any corporate board.
The corps want us fighting over scraps while they feast on freely shared research. But every open schematic, every replicated experiment, every shared methodology weakens their artificial monopolies.
The future isn’t built in corporate labs. It’s built in public spaces by people who remember that knowledge belongs to everyone.