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"map_content": "Now that it is solved, the consequence is not speculative. It means digital information has crossed a line that computing has never crossed before: it can now be structured as property rather than merely copied data.\r\nThat changes the web at its foundation. The web was built as a publication and replication system. A solved digital-possession layer turns it into a system that can also support ownership, transfer, provenance, custody, and enforceable scarcity. Files are no longer just files. They can become governed objects with a current possessor, a transfer history, a policy, and an auditable chain of truth.\r\nFor information security, this is a category change. Security no longer means only protecting a server, database, account, or perimeter. The protection can attach to the object itself. A document can carry its own transfer rules. A corporate file can require approved hardware. A government record can require authorised terminals and mandated approval. A financial instrument can require threshold authorisation. A digital artwork can have an original whose status is cryptographically distinct from every imitation.\r\nFor society, it creates a new property layer. Books, art, contracts, confidential files, trade secrets, legal evidence, securities, identity credentials, research data, archives, and government records can become digitally possessable. That means new markets, new legal doctrines, new security models, new corporate controls, new evidentiary standards, and new forms of exchange.\r\nThe real shift is this: information stops being merely something people access and becomes something people can hold, transfer, lose, inherit, pledge, audit, and govern.\r\nThat is world-changing because modern society is increasingly made of information. If information itself can now have possession, then the structure of commerce, law, security, publishing, finance, and institutional recordkeeping changes with it.\r\nWritten by S. Tominaga",
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