šŸœ Caribbean island makes millions from AI..

A tiny Caribbean island is making millions... thanks to its ā€œ.aiā€ web domain...

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A tiny Caribbean island is making millions… thanks to its ā€œ.aiā€ web domain 🌓. No tech hub, no AI lab—just sun, sand, and accidental internet royalties. Not bad for a country whose GDP now includes your ChatGPT startup. Alibaba’s cooking up a new AI chip šŸ‡ØšŸ‡³ while Xi politely reminds everyone to stop treating AI like Cold War 2.0. Strategic diplomacy or just a flex before launch? You’ll want to keep an eye on this one. And in the weirdest full-circle moment: companies are now hiring humans to clean up bad AI content 🧹. Turns out, the robot overlords still need interns to fix their grammar.

Are we living in a digital paradise—or just mopping up after the machines? Let’s get into it...

In today’s AI digest:

  • A tiny Caribbean island makes millions from its ā€œ.aiā€ web domain 🌓

  • Alibaba developing new AI chip as Xi rejects ā€˜Cold War’ rhetoric šŸ‡ØšŸ‡³

  • Humans hired to clean up low-quality AI-generated content 🧹

Read time: 5 minute

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WHAT’S HAPPENING TODAY

AI in Caribbean

(source: BBC)

🌓 The Digest: Anguilla—a Caribbean island better known for turquoise beaches than tech—just pulled off the ultimate plot twist: its boring old .ai internet domain is now a goldmine. Thanks to the AI boom, the island made $105 million last year just from companies registering .ai websites. It’s giving ā€œCaribbean cruise meets Silicon Valley IPOā€ energy.

Key Details:

šŸ’¾ From Sand to Servers – The .ai domain, assigned back in the ā€˜90s, turned out to be the island’s lottery ticket. Once overlooked, it’s now the hottest suffix in tech. Who knew a sleepy island domain could out-earn beachfront hotels?

šŸ’ø Tourism? Cute. Domains? Rich. – Tourism used to be Anguilla’s main source of income. Now .ai domain fees cover one-third of the government’s revenue. Imagine funding schools, hospitals, and a bigger airport—thanks to startups registering ā€œDogAI.com.ā€

šŸ“ˆ Steady Cash Flow – With a 90% renewal rate, the island basically has a subscription model… except instead of Netflix shows, you get tech bros fighting over domain names.

šŸŒŖļø Hurricane-Proof Revenue – Unlike tourism, which hurricanes can wreck, .ai domains don’t care about the weather. Unless ChatGPT suddenly learns how to surf, this money pipeline is pretty safe.

Why It Matters: Anguilla basically stumbled into the best side hustle ever. While the rest of the world scrambles to build trillion-dollar AI chips, this tiny island is like: ā€œWe just sell the dot at the end of your website, thanks.ā€ So yeah, if you’re sipping a piƱa colada in Anguilla and overhear locals bragging about ā€œAI money,ā€ they’re not talking about tech startups—they’re talking about literally selling punctuation. šŸļøšŸ’»šŸ’ø

How 433 Investors Unlocked 400X Return Potential

Institutional investors back startups to unlock outsized returns. Regular investors have to wait. But not anymore. Thanks to regulatory updates, some companies are doing things differently.

Take Revolut. In 2016, 433 regular people invested an average of $2,730. Today? They got a 400X buyout offer from the company, as Revolut’s valuation increased 89,900% in the same timeframe.

Founded by a former Zillow exec, Pacaso’s co-ownership tech reshapes the $1.3T vacation home market. They’ve earned $110M+ in gross profit to date, including 41% YoY growth in 2024 alone. They even reserved the Nasdaq ticker PCSO.

The same institutional investors behind Uber, Venmo, and eBay backed Pacaso. And you can join them. But not for long. Pacaso’s investment opportunity ends September 18.

Paid advertisement for Pacaso’s Regulation A offering. Read the offering circular at invest.pacaso.com. Reserving a ticker symbol is not a guarantee that the company will go public. Listing on the NASDAQ is subject to approvals.

(source: YahooFinance)

šŸ‡ØšŸ‡³ The Digest: Alibaba just unveiled a homegrown AI chip while President Xi took the stage to tell the world, ā€œHey, no Cold War vibes, okay?ā€ It’s giving ā€œwe want peace, but also we just built our own rocket launcherā€ energy. On one hand, Alibaba’s flexing with custom silicon. On the other, Xi’s handing out friendship bracelets at a tech summit.

Key Details:

šŸ’¾ DIY Chips, Alibaba Edition – After U.S. sanctions made Nvidia harder to get than a PS5 on launch day, Alibaba whipped up its own inference chip. It’s locally made too—because nothing screams independence like ā€œfine, we’ll build it ourselves.ā€

šŸ’ø $50B R&D Piggy Bank – Alibaba Cloud is throwing over $50 billion into AI and infrastructure by 2028. That’s enough money to either build cutting-edge chips… or buy every single gaming GPU on eBay twice over.

šŸŒ Xi’s ā€œNo Cold War, Pleaseā€ Tour – While Alibaba quietly builds its silicon fortress, Xi told the Shanghai Cooperation summit that AI should unite nations, not divide them. It’s like giving a group hug at a karate tournament.

šŸ¤ The Optics Game – On paper, this looks like China extending an olive branch. In practice, it’s more like extending the olive branch with one hand while soldering a GPU with the other.

Why It Matters: China’s message is basically: ā€œLet’s not fight… but just in case, we now make our own chips.ā€ The West is debating ethics panels and carbon footprints while Alibaba is speedrunning chip design like it’s a side quest. So yeah—peace speeches and power plays in the same week. It’s the geopolitical version of smiling for the yearbook photo while flexing under the desk. āš”šŸ‡ØšŸ‡³šŸ’»

AI content

(source: NBC)

🧹 The Digest: Remember when AI was supposed to save us from boring grunt work? Yeah, plot twist: humans are now being hired to mop up after AI’s mess. Companies are literally paying people six figures to fix the avalanche of ā€œAI slopā€ filling websites, feeds, and inboxes. It’s giving ā€œRoomba that still needs a babysitterā€ energy.

Key Details:

šŸ“ Copy Cleanup Crew – In Arizona, some pros are making $100/hour to rewrite AI-generated website copy that reads like it was written by a sleep-deprived intern on Red Bull.

šŸ‘€ Moderation Still Human – Platforms tried letting AI moderate content—then quickly realized bots don’t understand sarcasm, cultural nuance, or memes. So humans are still stuck being the internet’s hall monitors.

šŸ² What Even Is AI Slop? – ā€œAI slopā€ is the official term for low-effort, repetitive, or hilariously wrong AI content. Think ā€œinspirational quote blogsā€ that sound like they were written by a malfunctioning fortune cookie.

šŸŒ Invisible Workforce – A lot of this cleanup work falls to underpaid contractors overseas, quietly cleaning up the AI junkyard while Silicon Valley pats itself on the back for ā€œautomation.ā€

Why It Matters: The AI revolution promised fewer jobs, but instead created a new one: AI janitor. We’ve built models that can spit out 10,000 words in a minute—but they still need humans to go through with a broom, mop, and grammar check. So yeah—welcome to the future: robots write nonsense, humans edit nonsense, and the internet becomes a giant group project where you’re the one fixing your teammate’s garbage slide at 3 a.m. šŸ§¹šŸ¤–šŸ“„

THE NOODLE LAB

AI Hacks & How-Tos

The Digest: Latam‑GPT is an open-source AI language model built by and for Latin America, designed to deeply understand local dialects, cultural nuances, and historical contexts. It outperforms global models like GPT‑3.5 in regional accuracy and is crafted through collaboration with over 30 institutions.

How-to:

1. Explore the Platform
Visit latamgpt.org to learn more about the initiative, its goals, and how you can join or access the model once it launches in 2025.

2. Understand Its Purpose
Latam‑GPT excels at handling region-specific content—whether you’re talking about indigenous languages (like Rapa Nui or Mapudungun), Latin American history, or local idioms.

3. Know What’s Coming
The initial version will support Spanish, Portuguese, and English. Future upgrades aim to include Indigenous languages and features like text, image, and multimedia processing.

4. Plan for Local AI Apps
Once available, you can use Latam‑GPT to build custom tools for education, public services, or local business use—bringing AI that truly understands Latin American realities to your projects.

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