This is probably cheating since it’s not a physical object, but there is one resource that will never cease to be valuable and worth “storing”: reputation—your own, or that of your company or progeny if you’re thinking particularly long term. If that’s not a legal answer, then information, particularly about people’s spending habits, is probably the next best thing—as the big tech companies are aware.
I like the out of the box answer! It’d be an interesting thought experiment of it’s own to figure out how to best store reputation. I’m not sure how valuable 100 year old data about people’s spending habits would be, though, except as a historical novelty.
This is probably cheating since it’s not a physical object, but there is one resource that will never cease to be valuable and worth “storing”: reputation—your own, or that of your company or progeny if you’re thinking particularly long term. If that’s not a legal answer, then information, particularly about people’s spending habits, is probably the next best thing—as the big tech companies are aware.
I like the out of the box answer! It’d be an interesting thought experiment of it’s own to figure out how to best store reputation. I’m not sure how valuable 100 year old data about people’s spending habits would be, though, except as a historical novelty.
I was thinking too short term with the spending habits. It’s worth hoarding right now but probably not in a hundred years. Good point.