Many Spanish digital bookstores sell the .epub directly. This ensures the translation by Juan Manuel Salmerón Arjona (the Spanish localizer) is preserved perfectly.
Warning: Be wary of free download sites promising "La Ola Que Viene - Mustafa Suleyman.epub" immediately. These are often vectors for spyware. If a file is free and the book is a current bestseller, it is almost certainly pirated and potentially dangerous to your device.
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Takeaway: La Ola Que Viene is not a doom-scroll but a blueprint for responsibility. Suleyman argues that the coming decade will determine whether we contain the wave or are submerged by it. The EPUB file represents the very medium (digital, replicable, global) that both enables and threatens that containment. La Ola Que Viene - Mustafa Suleyman.epub
Final thought from the book: “The question is no longer whether the wave is coming. It is already here. The only question is what we build to meet it.”
In "La ola que viene" (originally The Coming Wave), Mustafa Suleyman
, co-founder of DeepMind and current CEO of Microsoft AI, presents a stark warning about the near future of humanity. Many Spanish digital bookstores sell the
The book argues that we are entering a era defined by a "wave" of fast-proliferating technologies—primarily artificial intelligence and synthetic biology—that will fundamentally reshape power, the economy, and our species. Key Themes & Insights
The Containment Problem: Suleyman establishes "containment"—the ability to maintain control over these powerful, self-proliferating technologies—as the ultimate challenge of our century.
The Great Dilemma: Society faces a choice between two dark paths: the "catastrophe" of uncontained, destructive technology (like engineered pathogens or autonomous weapons) or the "dystopia" of overbearing, panopticon-style surveillance needed to keep that tech in check. Warning: Be wary of free download sites promising
Beyond Just AI: While AI is the engine, the book explores its fusion with robotics, quantum computing, and synthetic biology, which allows for the engineering of both intelligence and life itself.
Threat to the Nation-State: These technologies empower small groups or individuals to cause massive disruption, potentially making traditional governments obsolete or incapable of maintaining order. Critical Reception
The central problem Suleyman identifies is asymmetric power: these technologies are becoming cheaper, more accessible, and harder to monitor. Key threats include:
Unlike nuclear technology (which requires rare materials and nation-state infrastructure), the new wave can be developed in a garage. This makes non-proliferation nearly impossible.