Abridged Preview

Stake Your Claim, 500 pages condensed into the core argument.

This is the abridged version of Stake Your Claim: 500 pages condensed into a more digestible read on AI ownership, authorship, provenance, agents, and building real assets while the market is still catching up.

Founder thesis Condensed preview Email delivery only

Built for readers who want the signal quickly, clearly, and without losing the substance of the larger work.

The shiftWhat changes when AI reprices creation and leverage.
Ownership railsWhy proof, rights, and provenance matter more as content scales.
Agents and assetsHow creators and operators turn intelligence into durable economic output.
What This Covers

The major arguments, stripped to the signal.

This preview distills the strongest threads from the broader 500-page book into something faster to absorb: AI ownership, authorship, agents, creator leverage, real asset formation, and why waiting gets more expensive the longer the market debates the obvious.

The shift

Why AI is repricing effort, output, and advantage across every industry.

Ownership and authorship

Why proof of creation, provenance, and rights infrastructure become premium when content becomes infinite.

Agents and leverage

How autonomous systems change the economics of operators, creators, and small businesses.

What endures

The asset mindset: building systems, IP, and long-duration value instead of chasing noise.

Why Read It Now

Because the compounding starts before consensus does.

Most people still treat AI as a tool story. The deeper story is ownership, automation, and asset capture. This abridged preview is for readers who want the core framework before the market fully prices in what durable infrastructure underneath AI media and agent commerce is worth.

What It Is

Not the full volume. Not filler either.

This is a condensed preview of the expanded edition, designed to deliver the major points from roughly 500 pages in a format that is easier to digest. If the full edition is the complete operating system, this is the sharp, high-signal briefing.