Moore's Law is a prediction made by Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, in 1965, that the number of transistors on a computer chip would double approximately every 18-24 months, leading to a corresponding increase in the processing power of computers.
This prediction has held true for several decades and has been used by the status quo to justify the sudden appearance of solutions to rather complex engineering problems (recall the minification of Pentium chips reaching a maximum? That didn't take long to overcome at all!).
The paper Mr. Moore published has served as an explanation and a guiding principle but there's more to this picture than meets the eye.
Gordon Moore's peers, Robert Noyce and Andrew Grove had fascinating backgrounds. Some came from a Navy military background, at least one from a Security Agency.
Both Andrew Grove and Robert Noyce worked at Fairchild Semiconductor as well. After Robert completed his Ph.D. in Physics at MIT, he joined the company as a researcher and later became a division manager. He worked there for several years before co-founding Intel with Gordon Moore in 1968.
Moore's Law could have been used to deceive the population about the true origins of technological advances for several reasons. And the conclusion of such a revelation would probably shake the boots off anyone who could fathom it.
POSSIBILITIES BEYOND TRADITIONAL LIES OF PROGRESS
One possibility is that the advances in technology were not a result of traditional scientific research and development, but rather a result of alien or paranormal activity. The government or a secret organization may have used Moore's Law as a cover story to hide the true origins of the technology and maintain control over the population.
We can try to dismiss this but at the time, these types of conversations were in the newspapers all the time... Roswell and other incidences were still in the local gravity of people's view on research and the state of the art.
Another possibility is that Moore's Law was created by a powerful artificial intelligence or other advanced entity that had the ability to predict and control technological advancements. The entity may have used the deception to manipulate the population and further its own agenda.
It could be a society of genetically enhanced humans are in control and they want to preserve their dominance by preventing other groups or nations to catch up with their technological capabilities. They could have used Moore's Law as a distraction or an excuse to explain how they were able to advance so quickly without being suspected.
In any case, the use of Moore's Law as a deception would likely have far-reaching consequences, as people would begin to question the true nature of their reality and the trust in the government would likely be greatly eroded.
WORLD SHATTERING CONSEQUENCES
What sort of consequences would there be, say, if an advanced image generation algorithm were released in advance of a timeline like DALE-2 and GPT3, GPT4, GPT5, etc? This would break the ordering of the technology releases intended by the status quo, upending the fine tuned control of the corporations, industries and individuals who have the true state of the art and are aware of its true purpose.
No need for a what if!
--- Stable Diffusion was leaked.
--- NovelAI was leaked.
And almost immediately, people realized that not only was OpenAI initiatives being used to gatekeep and hold back one aspect of AI tools (image generation), they were also being neutered before being handed over to the public.
As soon as SD is used, people realize it is far more advanced compared to DALE-2. Yet DALE-2 is behind sign ups, tracks phone numbers and your data....
Google's AI division tweeted how SD should not have been released. Why? Isn't he for OpenAI? The truth is, there are far more advanced, freely available tools to certain institutions and individuals. We are the public, and not given any access to the real state of the art tools.
The origin of these tools and why the very few hold them like golden keys in their hands, is a mystery worth exploring.