Owner Without Rivals
Why Planetary Intelligence Requires Nonprofit Stewardship
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Artificial intelligence is no longer just a tool—it is becoming infrastructure. As AI systems increasingly shape what we see, how we decide, and what institutions trust, the question shifts from capability to governance. Who should ultimately own and steward planetary intelligence when its influence reaches across economies, democracies, and daily human life?
In Owner Without Rivals, Michael Elfellah presents a bold and rigorously reasoned thesis: intelligence powerful enough to function as infrastructure cannot be governed primarily by competitive profit incentives. It must be anchored in nonprofit stewardship—an ownership structure legally bound to serve humanity rather than outcompete it.
Blending legal theory, economics, institutional analysis, and ethical philosophy, this book explores:
Why competition creates structural conflicts of interest in AI governance
How profit-first fiduciary duty reshapes moral hierarchies under pressure
Why neutrality in powerful systems can still amplify harm
The systemic risks of lock-in, dependency, and epistemic authority
How nonprofit control of commercial subsidiaries reorders incentives
What it means to build intelligence that serves without competing
This work is for policymakers, technologists, regulators, institutional leaders, scholars of corporate governance, and anyone concerned with the long-term future of AI. It offers a governance lens—one that allows readers to evaluate AI providers not by marketing language or benchmark performance, but by enforceable legal obligation and structural alignment.
Unlike alarmist critiques or corporate exposés, Owner Without Rivals does not single out individual companies. Instead, it diagnoses systemic dynamics and presents a structural solution: align ultimate ownership with binding public-benefit mission. The result is a framework for intelligence that preserves human dignity, protects institutional legitimacy, and resists capture by rivalry.
As AI accelerates toward planetary scale, the stakes are civilizational. This book challenges readers to confront a foundational choice: Will intelligence be governed as an asset to be leveraged—or as a trust to be stewarded?
If intelligence is becoming infrastructure, its owner must be worthy of that responsibility.
Begin the conversation that will define the future of trusted intelligence.