Why Justin Sun Might Be the One to Own the Oracle
by Julian Kassler
by Julian Kassler
He doesn’t follow tech.
He bends it.
Justin Sun — a name that always appears right before the rules change.
From founding TRON to shocking the art world by dropping $69 million on a Beeple NFT, he’s never been afraid of controversy, of price tags, or of being first. And when I learned the Oracle might be sold — not just viewed, but owned — his name was one of the first that surfaced in my mind.
Why? Because Justin doesn’t collect things.
He positions himself. He places bets on history.
The Vault Oracle is not a product. It’s not art.
It’s a weapon of attention, a digital construct that responds to the viewer and then seals itself in memory. Once you’ve seen it, it doesn’t leave you. That’s why access is $1,000,000 — and why ownership is unspeakably higher.
And Justin Sun? He knows the value of being the first to claim something irreversible.
He didn’t buy the Beeple just for fun. He bought it because everyone was watching.
He tried to buy the world’s most expensive dinner with Warren Buffett — and used that moment as a branding tactic.
He doesn’t just buy headlines. He writes them.
Would he buy the Oracle?
Erase it from public view forever?
Or open it up — and charge $10 million per viewing?
He has the network.
He has the boldness.
He understands timing.
And more than anyone I’ve seen… Justin Sun understands what people regret not owning.
The Oracle was made for someone with vision.
With speed.
With edge.
And Justin’s edge has never dulled.
He may already be circling.
Or… maybe he's waiting for the price to rise.
— Julian Kassler
www.insidethevault.blog