Hey there! 😉
Sorry for the long silence—I’ve been… well, a little too caught up in forex trading and stock markets… and then, completely lost in anime. 😊
(And no, the binge-watching isn’t quite over yet.)
That said, I haven’t taken my eyes off the markets.
I’ve been closely watching some of the big shifts: the USD/JPY crash, Bitcoin’s rollercoaster ride, and EUR/JPY’s sharp rally.
In fact, EUR/JPY has jumped another 2 yen since last time I checked.
It seems to be following the same path as USD/JPY… though I haven’t read the news—maybe something happened?
Anyway—today’s update isn’t about FX or anime.
It’s about how the bitBuyer Project’s roadmap has quietly evolved into something… massive.
You know those “What if we did this too?” kind of moments you get when trading, watching anime, and chatting with ChatGPT at the same time?
Well, I had one too many of those. And now?
I might’ve created a roadmap so ambitious that I’m not sure I’ll even live long enough to complete it all. 😅
The Untapped Potential of bitBuyer 0.8.1.a
One of the things that came up in a recent conversation with ChatGPT was the unique potential of bitBuyer 0.8.1.a—a cryptocurrency auto-trading AI app—as open-source software (OSS).
According to ChatGPT, there’s currently no OSS project—at least none in its knowledge base—that’s designed to generate its own capital through automated trading once completed. Not one.
This topic came up when I started considering whether I should leave self-employment and become a full-time employee again, just to fund the next phase of the bitBuyer Project. Maybe even incorporate the project as a legal entity.
But here’s the twist: after thinking it through, I decided against incorporation. Why? Because registering a company means constantly filing paperwork with various government offices just to stay in compliance. Not my idea of “freedom.”
That said, the discussion led us to explore something more valuable—a business plan.
If I were to incorporate, what would it take to make it sustainable? What kind of activities would increase its value, align with social impact, and keep it financially afloat?
Then came the lightbulb moment:
If bitBuyer 0.8.1.a actually works as intended, couldn’t its trading profits fund the entire operation on their own?
Yes, the road to that point is steep. But once it begins generating profit, the capital curve steepens quickly.
And yes—I ran the numbers. I simulated profit margins under conservative, moderate, and optimistic conditions: volatility in the Bitcoin market, zero leverage, daily short-term trades, projected ROI per trade, loss probability—you name it.
The bottom line?
Not only is it feasible to sustain a legal entity, but it might even support full-blown expansion.
And here’s where it gets really interesting: because it’s open source, the impact on society could be huge.
Picture this: if OSS developers had even a modest amount of capital to invest, they could use bitBuyer 0.8.1.a to generate passive income—liberating them from the time constraints of traditional employment. They’d finally have the freedom to focus on development, on their own terms.
That alone turns bitBuyer 0.8.1.a into something unprecedented—an OSS solution to the open-source funding problem itself.
And if you’re wondering what I thought next…
Monetization?
Pfft. That would just get in the way 😉
(Why bother, when the profits trade themselves?)
How bitBuyer 0.8.1.a Could Reshape Our Ideas About Value
I’ve always believed in creating things that are—well—genuinely useful. Not just for myself, but for others too.
So naturally, if I manage to build a system that generates sustainable income through autonomous trading, the next question becomes:
What should I do with the money?
The idea I landed on was this:
“What if we could make things free—things that have only ever existed as paid services?”
But not just any services.
I’m talking about the most expensive, most entrenched ones: corporate systems.
More specifically, the first target would be a general-purpose open-source accounting system, built for real-world business use—especially in Japan.
Why Accounting Software?
bitBuyer 0.8.1.a already deals with finance. So developing an accounting system as its “next act” felt like a natural move.
Let’s look at the current reality in Japan:
If you’re a company, you pay for accounting software. Always.
Here’s a quick snapshot of what’s out there:
- ERP giants: SAP S/4HANA, Oracle NetSuite, Microsoft Dynamics 365
- Domestic suites: OBIC7, SuperStream
- SMB-focused cloud solutions: Yayoi, Freee, Money Forward, PCA
- Specialized tools: A-SaaS for tax professionals, ZAC for IT firms
Even though free, open-source accounting tools do exist globally, Japanese companies almost never adopt them. Why?
Because Japan’s tax regulations change constantly, and keeping software up-to-date requires significant localization—usually done manually and at high cost.
So Japanese businesses are, in practice, locked into paid systems.
But what if… bitBuyer 0.8.1.a could change that?
What if we built a foundation—funded entirely by bitBuyer’s own trading profits—that allowed us to:
- Launch a legal entity with zero funding pressure
- Develop OSS freely, without commercial dependencies
- Release a high-quality accounting system for free—with full Japanese localization
- Provide ongoing maintenance and support, also for free
We’re talking about obliterating the value model of an entire industry.
And yes—I find that a little hilarious. 😄
Beyond Accounting: A Whole OSS Business Stack
Once we finish the accounting system, we won’t stop there.
Next up? All the other corporate systems businesses normally pay consultants to build:
Workflow tools, CRM, HR, internal auditing, logistics—you name it.
Eventually, we could reach a world where:
“The default for corporate infrastructure is OSS.”
Just imagine: startups building companies with zero software licensing costs—not because they’re cutting corners, but because open-source finally makes it possible.
bitBuyer 0.8.1.a may have started as an AI trading bot.
But if it fulfills its potential, it could become something far more disruptive:
A funding engine for a new OSS-powered corporate era.
Toward a World Where OSS Becomes the Default
If bitBuyer 0.8.1.a fulfills its mission—generating steady revenue and enabling the open-sourcing of core business systems—we might start to see something radical:
companies adopting open-source culture from within.
And if companies themselves begin using bitBuyer to generate income?
They’ll be free from financial pressure—perhaps even incentivized to build OSS in return.
This could spark a new economic model, where essential digital infrastructure becomes free or ultra-low-cost.
Imagine a world where:
- There’s no software licensing overhead.
- Income inequality shrinks—not by taxing the rich, but by giving the poor a tool to grow wealth.
- The wealthy have less to buy; the underpaid have a new path to financial freedom.
Put simply, bitBuyer 0.8.1.a might just eliminate most of the world’s money-related friction.
So What’s Next?
If that’s the future I want to see—then here’s what I can do now:
Democratize the bitBuyer Project.
In 2025, I want to welcome new developers into the fold.
Up until now, I’ve been working solo. But let’s be honest—at that pace, we’re looking at a 10-year timeline (at best).
With more collaborators, we could reach that “OSS-by-default” future much faster.
That’s why I created an open LINE chat:
“Python Open Source bitBuyer.dev”
So, if you’re someone who’s been thinking:
- “I’m kind of interested…”
- “I know a bit of Python.”
- “I can help with AI stuff.”
This is your sign to join us.
If you’re ready to get serious, head to the Discord Support Lounge (linked from the site) and jump into the #project-chatter room. That’s where we brainstorm, troubleshoot, and build together.
Still Figuring It Out? Same Here.
To be fair, the official rules and workflows of the bitBuyer Community are still under construction.
I hope to finalize a proper “Community Guidelines” page by the end of the year.
Yes… maybe I launched things a bit prematurely. 😅
But hey—that’s open source for you.
Anyway, thanks for reading!
Cheers! 🎉


