Elon Musk is taking SpaceX public in 2026.
SpaceX is looking to raise more than $30 billion from public investors, The New York Post reports. At $1.5 trillion in valuation, it is slated to be the largest IPO in history, and part of the plan is to launch AI data centers into space where there is unlimited solar power, solving one of the biggest challenges facing the tech.
Bob Maginnis, author of AI for Mankind's future.
“If you can put all this in space, you know, data centers and the like, you do away with the cooling problem. You do away with some of the electrical requirements, which are phenomenal.”
SpaceX is known for its rocket and satellite launches as Musk works with NASA and the federal government to return U.S. astronauts to the moon. The billionaire has said he eventually wants to establish a colony on Mars.
In June, Musk revealed on X that he expected SpaceX to generate about $15.5 billion in revenue this year – a number that he said will exceed the entire budget of @NASA next year.”
Musk has also signaled that SpaceX could look to build data centers in orbit in order to backstop his artificial intelligence plans, The Post reported.
The SpaceX move could put Musk in the driver's seat when it comes to controlling the ultra-powerful computing technology. But Maginnis says that control may be just an illusion.
“The question is whether or not they're going to control it. We will just bow down and allow these incredibly smart devices to make decisions for us.”
He says the trend seems to be to rely on AI for just about everything, from school papers to running a business to running a country and its military.
“The confidence in these algorithms is growing exponentially because people are just stupid.”
Maginnis says the pieces are coming together that could lead us straight to the biblical end times.
“This is really fulfilling much of what you see in Revelation 13, the Mark of the Beast, the things that we couldn't explain in Matthew 24. All of this is becoming, in my opinion, far clearer than it's ever been in the past because the technology allows this to happen.”