Who Will Build It? The Missing Question in the Race to Build Beyond Earth

By Norm Levy
Author of Band on the Run

We are watching something extraordinary unfold in real time.

Not long ago, space felt distant again, reserved for rare launches and symbolic milestones. Today, it feels active. Continuous. Almost industrial. Rockets lift off with increasing frequency, and more remarkably, they return. What once disappeared into the sky now lands back on Earth with precision, ready to fly again. Reusability has changed the economics, and with it, the pace.

Programs like NASA Artemis are pushing humanity back toward the Moon with long-term intent, not just flags and footprints, but infrastructure. At the same time, private industry is accelerating timelines and reframing space not as exploration alone, but as extension.

This is no longer just about going to space.

It is about building in space.

At the same time, other forces are converging in ways that feel impossible to ignore. Artificial intelligence is driving an unprecedented demand for compute. Data centers are expanding at a pace that is already straining power grids, land availability, and cooling systems here on Earth. Some of the most serious conversations in infrastructure today are no longer about optimization, but relocation.

There is now credible discussion around placing data centers in orbit, powered by uninterrupted solar energy, free from terrestrial constraints. What once sounded speculative is now being modeled, financed, and quietly engineered.

Energy is becoming the currency. Compute is becoming the engine. And space is becoming the release valve.

Alongside this, the economics of materials are shifting. Rare metals essential to modern life—cobalt, platinum, palladium—are increasingly difficult and expensive to extract on Earth. Meanwhile, asteroids rich in these exact resources exist in staggering abundance just beyond our atmosphere.

For decades, this was theory.

Now, it is strategy.

At the same time, zero gravity introduces entirely new possibilities for manufacturing. Processes that are inefficient or impossible on Earth become not only feasible, but optimal. Advanced materials, pharmaceuticals, precision fabrication—all benefit from an environment where gravity is no longer a constraint.

Taken together, these shifts point to something much larger than exploration.

We are preparing, in real terms, to industrialize space.

And yet, beneath all of this momentum, there is a question almost no one is asking.

Not who gets to go. Not who gets to explore.

Who will build it?

Because space will not be built by astronauts.

Astronauts will lead. They will explore. They will inspire. But they will not construct the infrastructure required for humanity to live and work beyond Earth at scale.

That will take workers.

Builders. Operators. Technicians.

Not dozens. Not hundreds.

Thousands.

Eventually, tens of thousands.

There was a moment in a recent fictional interview I wrote, where a visionary architect of this future was asked directly where that workforce would come from. His answer was calm, almost effortless. Cities are overwhelmed. Systems are strained. People are looking for structure, for opportunity, for a second chance. Take those at the margins, he suggested, and give them purpose inside something bigger.

It was framed as a solution.

And that is where the question becomes harder to ignore.

Because history offers a pattern.

New worlds are not built by visionaries alone. They are built by those with fewer options. The displaced. The overlooked. The ones willing, or compelled, to step into uncertainty because the alternative offers less.

In another era, people stood at a very different kind of threshold, facing impossible choices. Stay and struggle, or leave and build something unknown. The result was the foundation of entirely new societies, built not just on ambition, but on necessity.

That pattern is not ancient history.

It is human nature.

And as we stand at the edge of a new frontier, it is worth asking whether anything fundamental about that pattern has changed.

Because building a world is not the same as visiting one.

It is slower. Harder. Less visible. It requires endurance, repetition, and scale. It requires people willing to do the work long after the cameras have turned away.

None of this diminishes what is happening today.

If anything, it makes it more real.

More grounded.

More consequential.

Because once the technology works, once the economics align, once the pathways between Earth and orbit become routine, the bottleneck will shift.

It will no longer be whether we can build beyond Earth.

It will be whether we have the workforce to do it.

And how that workforce is found, incentivized, or compelled.

That question has stayed with me for a long time.

It sits quietly beneath every launch, every breakthrough, every announcement about the future of life beyond Earth.

It is, in many ways, the reason I began writing Band on the Run.

Not as a prediction. Not as a warning.

But as a story built around a simple, uncomfortable idea:

The future isn’t just something we imagine.

It’s something someone has to build.

Feels like we’re asking all the right questions about how to get there.


Not sure we’re asking enough about what happens after we do.

Would love to hear how others are thinking about that.


Writing more about this at bandonthe.run for anyone interested.

Norm Levy Joins Tunies Group as Strategic Advisor

Tunies Group announced that media entrepreneur and industry connector Norm Levy has joined the company as a Strategic Advisor, where he will help introduce the company to long-term investors and strategic partners as it builds a new platform for children’s intellectual property.

Tunies Group is developing a next-generation children’s IP ecosystem built around animated content, music, consumer products, and live experiences. At the center of the platform is its flagship property, The Tunies, a music-driven animated universe designed to promote creativity, positivity, and emotional development for young audiences.

Founded by longtime music industry executive Ricky Anderson, whose career includes senior A&R roles at GOOD Music and Def Jam Records, Tunies has already demonstrated early organic traction online, surpassing 150 million YouTube views and building a growing global audience of families discovering the characters through digital-first platforms.

The company is structured as a platform designed to incubate and scale multiple children’s IP properties across content, consumer products, licensing, educational products, and experiences. In addition to The Tunies, the growing IP portfolio includes Jump! With Friends, an interactive learning and movement brand, and CJ’s Dreamverse, a children’s book franchise preparing for animated adaptation.

Levy brings more than two decades of experience working at the intersection of entertainment, technology, and media partnerships. Over the course of his career he has built a reputation as a trusted connector between creative founders, investors, and strategic partners across industries.

In his advisory role, Levy will help introduce Tunies to long-term capital partners and organizations aligned with the company’s mission to build culturally relevant, values-driven children’s brands that can grow across multiple formats and generations.

“Tunies is being built as a modern franchise platform for children’s IP,” Levy said. “What impressed me most is the combination of authentic creative leadership, strong early audience traction, and a strategy designed from the beginning to scale across content, music, products, and experiences. I’m excited to help introduce the company to partners who see the long-term potential of building enduring children’s brands.”

Tunies Group is currently expanding its content slate and strategic partnerships as it continues to develop its portfolio of digital-first children’s franchises.

Norm Levy Joins HumanAIx Foundation as Senior Advisor to Support DeAI Summit 2026

Norm Levy has joined the HumanAIx Foundation as a Senior Advisor, supporting the organization’s efforts to convene global leaders at the upcoming DeAI Summit 2026, titled “Beyond Borders: The Inflection Point of AI.”

The summit will take place October 28–30, 2026 in St. Julians, Malta, bringing together policymakers, frontier AI researchers, decentralized infrastructure builders, and enterprise leaders at a moment many believe will define the trajectory of artificial intelligence for decades to come.

As Senior Advisor, Levy will focus on helping attract globally recognized speakers from across the AI ecosystem. His work will include outreach to leading technologists, researchers, policymakers, and public intellectuals whose voices are shaping the global debate about the future of machine intelligence.

Organized by the Swiss-based HumanAIx Foundation, the DeAI Summit is designed as a forum where the most important questions surrounding AI development, governance, and societal impact can be debated openly. Rather than a traditional technology conference, the summit brings together three communities that rarely share the same stage: frontier AI labs developing advanced systems, decentralized AI infrastructure builders exploring new governance models, and policymakers responsible for building the regulatory frameworks that will guide the technology’s future.

The event is expected to attract approximately 5,000 international delegates, including researchers, founders, regulators, enterprise leaders, and venture investors. Programming will include Oxford-style debates, technical sessions on AI governance and safety, and closed-door discussions addressing some of the most pressing challenges facing the field.

HumanAIx is pioneering an open framework for decentralized AI infrastructure, bringing together blockchain ecosystems, academic institutions, and researchers working at the intersection of artificial intelligence and distributed technologies. The foundation’s mission is to promote human-centered, ethical AI systems that remain transparent, accountable, and accessible.

Levy brings decades of experience at the intersection of technology, media, and emerging innovation ecosystems. In his advisory role with HumanAIx, he will help shape a speaker lineup that reflects the diversity of perspectives needed to navigate the next chapter of the AI era.

As artificial intelligence rapidly evolves from research breakthrough to global infrastructure, the DeAI Summit aims to serve as a neutral forum where technologists, policymakers, and entrepreneurs can engage in serious dialogue about the future of intelligence and the responsibilities that come with it.

For inquiries regarding speaking opportunities, sponsorship, or participation in DeAI Summit 2026, interested parties are welcome to contact Norm Levy directly.

Norm Levy Joins Sovereign AI as Advisor to Support Strategic Partnerships and Long Term Investors

Sovereign AI, a UK-based company focused on building sovereign artificial intelligence infrastructure for allied governments and strategic industries, has announced that Norm Levy has joined the company as an advisor.

Levy will help support Sovereign AI’s efforts to engage long term investors, infrastructure partners, and strategic collaborators as the company advances its mission to establish sovereign AI capability across Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.

Sovereign AI is developing large scale AI compute infrastructure designed to ensure that governments and critical industries maintain sovereign control over next generation artificial intelligence systems. As artificial intelligence becomes central to economic competitiveness and national security, many nations are beginning to treat AI compute capacity as critical infrastructure similar to energy networks, telecommunications, and transportation systems.

The company recently announced partnerships with leading technology firms including Palantir, NVIDIA, Dell, and Accenture to help build and operate a network of AI data centers intended to support sovereign AI deployments. These efforts reflect a broader global shift toward regionally controlled AI infrastructure capable of supporting both government and commercial clients.

Levy brings decades of experience working at the intersection of technology, media, and emerging infrastructure platforms. Throughout his career he has helped connect entrepreneurs, investors, and institutions around transformative projects spanning digital media, communications technology, and space related ventures.

“Artificial intelligence will shape the economic and security landscape of the next century,” Levy said. “Ensuring that nations have sovereign access to the infrastructure that powers these systems will be one of the defining challenges of our time. I am excited to help Sovereign AI build partnerships that support that mission.”

In his advisory role, Levy will focus on helping Sovereign AI expand relationships with long term capital partners and strategic stakeholders who share the company’s vision of building resilient AI infrastructure for the future.

As governments increasingly view artificial intelligence capability as a matter of national resilience and economic independence, Sovereign AI is positioning itself to help build the infrastructure layer that will support the next generation of AI development.

Norm Levy Joins SYNQABL as Strategic Advisor

SYNQABL, an AI-powered music publishing and licensing platform modernizing how independent and unpublished music is discovered and monetized, has announced that Norm Levy has joined the company as a strategic advisor.

In this role, Levy will work with SYNQABL’s leadership team to help attract aligned strategic partners and long-term investors, while strengthening relationships across both sides of the marketplace. His focus includes supporting partnerships with publishers, catalog owners, artists, and managers, as well as deepening engagement with music supervisors, agencies, studios, and media platforms seeking high-quality music at scale.

Bridging Music, Media, and Technology

Levy brings decades of experience at the intersection of music, entertainment, technology, and capital, including artist collaboration, Hollywood and media relationships, and advisory work with growing technology platforms. That perspective aligns closely with SYNQABL’s mission to build modern infrastructure that enhances creative ecosystems rather than replacing the relationships that sustain them.

SYNQABL combines AI-powered music discovery, automated catalog ingestion, and streamlined licensing workflows to address long-standing inefficiencies in the sync licensing market. As demand for authentic music across film, television, advertising, and digital media continues to grow, much of the independent music ecosystem remains underutilized due to fragmented processes and limited discoverability.

Supporting Marketplace Growth

As an advisor, Levy will support SYNQABL’s efforts to:

  • Expand strategic relationships with publishers, rights holders, and catalog owners
  • Drive adoption among music supervisors, agencies, studios, and brands
  • Engage long-term strategic investors aligned with creator-respectful growth

The company has moved beyond concept into commercial validation, with a live platform, post-revenue activity, and active buyer demand. Levy’s involvement is intended to help guide SYNQABL’s next phase of growth through thoughtful partnerships and disciplined expansion.

Looking Ahead

As the music industry evolves alongside advances in AI and media distribution, platforms that balance creative integrity with scalable, transparent infrastructure are increasingly foundational.

With Levy joining as a strategic advisor, SYNQABL aims to further strengthen its role as a trusted bridge between creators, rights holders, and the media companies that rely on great music to tell compelling stories.

Norm Consults for World’s Foremost Authority in Cognitive AI, Peter Voss, on Direct Path to AGI

Peter Voss is an AI pioneer renowned for coining the term Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), with his partners at the time, Ben Hortzel (SingularityNET) and Shane Legg (DeepMind founder).  Peter is on track to bring Human-Level AI (AGI) to the world.

Peter adopted a radically different approach to solving “intelligence” by using Cognitive AI, which mimics the human mind. This method does not rely on big data, massive compute power, or statistical AI. Instead, by leveraging a team of AI psychologists and engineers, he aims to overcome the limitations of large language models (LLMs), which are not, in Peter’s hypothesis, the path to achieving human-level AI.

Peter’s alternative path to AGI consumes at least 6 orders of magnitude less resources than GenAI and overcomes all the limitations of LLMs.  

Unlike humans, it takes Aigo less than 3-years to evolve from 4-year-old, where we are now, to a graduate level with its self-learning and meta-cognitive reasoning ability. Once Aigo is at a graduate level, it opens up a whole new set of opportunities that aren’t in the realm of possibilities today.  The impact of AGI on Humanity will be quite astonishing!

  • Boost Human Flourishing
  • Scientific Advancements
  • Economic Growth
  • End of Poverty
  • End of Diseases
  • Radical Longevity 
  • Fusion & Thermal Energies
  • Super Capacitors and so much more.

Creating The Future With Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) With Peter Voss Full Interview