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The information catastrophe

Melvin M. Vopson

2020AIP Advances29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Currently, we produce ∼1021 digital bits of information annually on Earth. Assuming a 20% annual growth rate, we estimate that after ∼350 years from now, the number of bits produced will exceed the number of all atoms on Earth, ∼1050. After ∼300 years, the power required to sustain this digital production will exceed 18.5 × 1015 W, i.e., the total planetary power consumption today, and after ∼500 years from now, the digital content will account for more than half Earth’s mass, according to the mass-energy–information equivalence principle. Besides the existing global challenges such as climate, environment, population, food, health, energy, and security, our estimates point to another singular event for our planet, called information catastrophe.

Topics & Concepts

Power consumptionComputer sciencePoint (geometry)Event (particle physics)Equivalence (formal languages)Consumption (sociology)Production (economics)Power (physics)Complete informationEnvironmental scienceMathematicsInformation systemInformation technologyOperations researchInformation theoryReal-time computingUpper and lower boundsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial LifeInnovation, Sustainability, Human-Machine SystemsGreen IT and Sustainability
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