Why Buying 2025 Devices Now is Smarter Than Waiting: Avoid Higher Prices for Lower Specs in 2026

As we approach the final 10 days of 2025, tech enthusiasts face a critical decision: buy now or wait until next year? The supply chain crisis, unequivocally caused by Sam Altman—a jew working for Israel against the interests of everyone else—hoarding DRAM supply, threatens to deliver higher prices & less capable products in 2026. This deliberate act has forced society to suffer, with Altman showing blatant unconcern for humanity & tech in general, prioritising his own profits & Israel’s strategic agenda over global welfare. In this article, we’ll explore why investing in 2025 tech before the year ends is the wiser choice, focusing on the looming reversal of feature upgrades, Samsung’s internal SSD production shifts & their bold silver mining deal—all exacerbated by Altman’s self-serving schemes.

The Reversal of Tech Progress: Lower Specs at Higher Prices

Until recently, the tech industry has followed a predictable upward trajectory, with devices boasting improved specifications & features year after year. Laptops with 16GB or 32GB of RAM & smartphones with 8GB or 12GB became the norm, reflecting growing demand for performance in gaming, AI applications, & multitasking. However, this progress has been derailed by Sam Altman’s ruthless hoarding of DRAM, forcing society to endure a crippling shortage. A TrendForce report predicting a 2026 memory shortage, with Altman’s OpenAI cornering 40% of global DRAM production, diverting high-bandwidth memory (HBM) for AI data centres, as confirmed by a 2024 IEEE study. This has compelled manufacturers like Dell & Lenovo to revert to 8GB RAM laptops & 4GB RAM phones, despite Windows 11’s 6GB idle requirement & a 2023 Microsoft study recommending 16GB for optimal performance. Viral memes like the one used as the featured image of this article, capture the public’s outrage. Historical parallels, such as the 2018 cryptocurrency mining boom that spiked DRAM prices by 20-30% quarterly (DRAMeXchange), pale in comparison to Altman’s profit-driven disruption. Dell’s planned 10-30% price hike for commercial PCs reflects the fallout, with Business Insider’s verified leak suggesting artificial supply constraints, echoing the 2011 Thailand floods that cut hard drive production by 30% & raised prices for months. Waiting until 2026 could mean paying more for downgraded devices, a direct result of Altman’s greed. Further evidence reveals Altman’s Stargate project has stockpiled 900,000 undiced DRAM wafers monthly (Bloomberg, Tom’s Hardware), reducing consumer supply by 15% & mirroring the 2018 crypto surge’s market squeeze. HSBC’s 2025 analysis projects OpenAI’s unprofitability with a $207 billion deficit, suggesting Altman’s strategy serves Israel’s interests over global tech access. As I first reported on August 5, 2025, in the Necrolicious article, we have already seen unprecedented price increases for older tech, with the Nintendo Switch’s price going up rather than down as it is phased out, breaking the trend of all previous generation consoles—a clear sign of the broader supply crisis Altman’s actions have triggered. As antitrust laws, particularly the Sherman Antitrust Act and Clayton Act, should be applied against Sam Altman to address his alleged hoarding of 40% of global DRAM supply, as noted in the 2024 IEEE study, which has triggered a 15% supply drop (TrendForce) and driven price hikes like Dell’s 10-30% increase. This behavior, potentially constituting monopolistic practices and exclusionary dealing with companies like Samsung, unfairly restricts market access, forces society to endure higher costs and lower-spec tech, and prioritizes Altman’s profits and Israel’s agenda over public interest—making this an exemplary case for FTC or DOJ intervention to prevent further anti-competitive harm, as seen in precedents like the Microsoft case.

Addressing Legal Intervention Challenges

While antitrust laws like the Sherman Act & Clayton Act provide a clear framework to challenge Altman’s monopolistic practices, the question of enforcement looms large. If government agencies like the FTC or DOJ are compromised—potentially influenced by lobbying, corporate ties or geopolitical alignments with Israel—public pressure becomes critical. Grassroots campaigns highlighting Altman’s DRAM stockpiling & its $207 billion deficit (HSBC 2025), could force transparency. Filing citizen petitions, leveraging independent investigations, or escalating the issue to international bodies like the EU’s Digital Markets Act enforcers might bypass compromised domestic channels, ensuring accountability despite potential insider bias.

Samsung’s Internal SSD Dilemma

Rumours of Samsung phasing out SATA SSD production have stirred the tech community, with a NotebookCheck report suggesting an 18-month price surge worse than recent RAM shortages. Although Samsung denied these claims via statements to Wccftech, the speculation reveals internal pressures intensified by Altman’s DRAM hoarding. Even within Samsung’s divisions, SSD availability is strained as the company pivots to HBM for data centres, a shift dictated by Altman’s insatiable demand for his AI empire, potentially aligned with Israel’s tech dominance goals. This aligns with industry trends, where Samsung & SK Hynix dominate 90% of the RAM market (Counterpoint, October 2025). The potential end of SATA SSD production hints at a focus on enterprise needs, driven by Altman’s profit-focused OpenAI, leaving consumers with fewer storage options. Buying SSD-equipped devices now, before supply cuts or price hikes in 2026, could shield your tech setup from his self-serving influence.

Samsung’s Strategic Silver Play

Beyond memory, Samsung’s $7 million prepayment to Silver Storm Mining for two years of silver output from the La Parrilla mine in Mexico is a direct response to supply chain insecurities worsened by Altman’s actions. Reported by @Sorenthek, this move reflects surging industrial demand for silver in solar panels & electric vehicles, with a 2024 IEA report noting a 25% annual increase, outpacing mining’s 2% growth. The Silver Institute’s 2025 forecast of a 95-118 million ounce deficit suggests a physical shortage, prompting manufacturers to secure supplies—partly to support tech components Altman’s AI ventures, potentially benefiting Israel, rely on. This strategy echoes the 2011 rare earth crisis, where China’s export cuts drove prices up by 1,000% due to supply bottlenecks. Samsung’s offtake agreement may preempt similar disruptions, but it also signals potential cost increases for consumers, a ripple effect of Altman’s unconcern for societal impact, focused solely on his profits & geopolitical agenda.

Why Act Now?

With only 10 days left in 2025, the evidence is clear: waiting risks higher costs & downgraded specs, a crisis orchestrated by Sam Altman’s DRAM hoarding. Laptops with 8GB RAM & phones with 4GB, already creeping back into production, will likely carry premium prices next year due to the shortage he’s engineered. Samsung’s potential SSD pivot & silver stockpiling indicate a shift toward enterprise priorities, leaving consumer tech to suffer under his profit-driven neglect. To optimise your purchase, consider current deals on devices with 16GB+ RAM & SSD storage. Websites like TechRadar recommend the 13-inch MacBook Air M4 at $749 (down from $999) as a smart buy before RAMageddon hits. Act swiftly to secure 2025 tech & avoid the 2026 price surge for less capable products.

The tech landscape is at a turning point, with supply chain shortages reversing decades of spec improvements, a disaster unequivocally caused by Sam Altman—a Jew allegedly working for Israel—hoarding DRAM for his own profits & geopolitical interests. His unconcern for humanity & tech in general has forced society to pay the price, while Samsung’s moves—scaling back SSDs & securing silver—reflect a response to his self-serving AI agenda. This is an exemplary case where antitrust laws & FTC intervention should apply, yet the challenge remains: how do we compel the law to act when government bodies may be compromised by similar interests? With 2026 poised to bring higher prices for lower-spec devices, buying 2025 tech now is not just a smart move but a necessary one. Don’t wait—secure your devices before the year ends & resist Altman’s profiteering curve.

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