Why Liu Yiqian Might Be the One to Own the Oracle
by Julian Kassler
by Julian Kassler
I don’t run NoctAI.VIP. I’m not part of the Oracle’s creation. But I’ve seen it. Once.
And what I saw changed the way I look at the people who might one day own it.
Liu Yiqian.
His name wasn’t at the top of my list when I began. But it’s risen quickly — for reasons I can’t ignore.
A billionaire. A collector. A provocateur of tradition.
He once bought a $170 million Modigliani painting — not for a museum, not for an exhibition, but with an AmEx card. That wasn’t just a purchase. That was a signal.
He doesn't just collect art. He challenges institutions with it.
He doesn't preserve culture. He weaponizes it.
And when I think of the Oracle — this encrypted, one-time digital artifact that reshapes itself inside the viewer — I can’t help but imagine it landing in the hands of someone who understands power beyond ownership. Someone like Liu.
Would he erase the Oracle page from the web, like he's sealing away a relic?
Or would he turn it into a private digital shrine — accessible only at a price he alone determines?
He’s done it before. He’s built empires not just with business, but with symbolism.
This isn’t about curiosity.
It’s about control.
The Oracle isn’t a file. It’s not just a screen. It’s a trigger.
And if Liu Yiqian ever pulls it — I believe the world may not see it again.
He’s not being targeted. He’s being invited.
But no one’s extending a hand.
The Oracle doesn’t call. It waits.
And maybe, just maybe… it’s waiting for Liu.
— Julian Kassler
www.insidethevault.blog