What happens to society when material needs are no longer a concern? I recently sat down with a group of high school students to explore the concept of Post-Scarcity Black Markets - worlds where advanced technology meets every basic physical requirement.
It was a fascinating look into how the next generation perceives civilization. The core takeaway? Even when material items are abundant, black markets will thrive. They won't be driven by a lack of supply, but by restrictions, ethics, novelty, thrill, and the unyielding nature of human desire.
Here is what we discovered about the "shadow commerce" of the future:
Post scarcity does not mean infinite abundance of EVERYTHING, so everything is NOT FREE but abundance of materials.
What Gets Trafficked
Since replicators can produce most goods, black markets focus on:
- Autonomy, Privacy and Unfiltered Data: Anonymity and independence from systems – off-grid identities, access to unmonitored spaces, untracked economic transactions, tools to scramble biometrics and telemetry from the central AI.
In this world, privacy itself may become contraband.
- Personal Augmentation: Unregulated human argumentation - Illegal genetic edits (intelligence, aggression, longevity), banned neural implants, memory edit, personality modification.
This is where black markets create superhumans or unstable ones
- Authenticity: Handmade items, pre-technology era collectibles, natural (non-synthetic food, real performances with imperfections, or nostalgic items that represent emotional states rather than utility.
This becomes a world where “handmade” is contraband luxury.
- Restricted Experiences: Access to dangerous, extreme, forbidden experiences – high risk physical experiences, unfiltered virtual realities, “raw” or unmoderated internet layers.
Think of it as adrenaline and taboo becoming the new drugs
- Dangerous Innovations and Unfiltered Tech: Jailbroken or unfiltered artificial intelligences that lack the safety protocols, fabrication labs for prohibited devices, smuggling of off-world tech from less-regulated colonies, bartered restricted resources (e.g., rare elements not fully abundant yet).
Potentially leading to "gray zones" where authorities turn a blind eye to innovation benefits.
- Taboo Computing: Unauthorized AI creation, mind emulations, or illegal brain scanning and memory extraction & plantation.
Taboos are always desirable to a lot of people
- Forbidden Identity: Unregistered personalities or curated emotional experiences extracted from donors (willing as well as forced).
- Scarcity Recreation Market: Simulated “hard mode” environments (no AI help, limited resources), Real-world exclusion zones where automation is banned, Underground “survival economies.”
People will pay to feel what it was like when things mattered more
- Positional Goods and Social Scarcity: "Illegal" access to protected historical sites, nature preserves, or prime real estate that cannot be replicated; a "shadow" reputation market where people trade favors or social credit to gain access to exclusive social circles that cannot be entered through material wealth alone.
Exclusivity always demands a premium
Black markets mostly don’t depend on a lack of supply; they depend on restrictions and human desire.
In post-scarcity, the equation shifts:
Black markets = Anything restricted by law, ethics, or system control, not by production limits
The Ecosystem of Shadow Commerce
Instead of traditional street gangs, these markets are run by algorithmic syndicates, rogue AIs, unregulated AI agents acting on behalf of humans, or human enclaves seeking freedom from oversight. Governments often tolerate these markets as a social release valve to prevent greater societal anxiety and as a source of innovation - focusing on containment rather than total eradication.
