Interview with Author – Anndy Lian [Web4: The Age of Autonomous Intelligence]

Interview with Author – Anndy Lian [Web4: The Age of Autonomous Intelligence]

About Anndy Lian:
Anndy Lian is an all-rounded business strategist in Asia. He has provided advisory across a variety of industries for local, international, public listed companies and governments.

What inspires you to write?
My writing is entirely driven by a desire to tackle systemic problems and demystify the complex technical realities shaping our society. When I look at the current digital landscape, I see an environment where users have been reduced to products and data refugees under the weight of surveillance capitalism.

What inspires me to put pen to paper is the belief that knowledge shared is power multiplied. I write to provide a rigorous, forward-thinking blueprint that gives individuals the tools to understand, challenge tech hype, and reclaim their digital sovereignty.

What authors do you read when you aren’t writing?
When I look at authors and thinkers who influence my perspective, I am drawn to those who possess deep industry realism and refuse to get swept up in corporate or tech hype. I deeply respect pioneers, builders, and strategic minds who put in the work, say what they mean, and focus on practical frameworks over speculation.

My favorite literature consists of foundational whitepapers, rigorous economic models, and strategic treatises that analyze how human coordination, national-level regulation, and digital assets intersect to shape human civilization.

Robert Kiyosaki is one of my favourite. CZ Zhao has a good book too.

Tell us about your writing process.
My writing process is iterative, data-driven, and relies heavily on structural pressure testing. I spent three years and total of 23 versions finishing it. Because I write about bleeding-edge infrastructure and macroeconomic trends, my process begins with a raw critique of market conditions—such as tracking data extraction pipelines, analyzing validator concentration, or evaluating smart contract failures.

Once the core thesis is built, I write extensively to flesh out the concepts, and then I edit aggressively. For this book, I removed over 140 pages from the final draft simply to make it more “readable” and digestible for a mainstream audience. If a concept is too dense to be actionable for a builder or a policymaker, it gets cut.

For Fiction Writers: Do you listen (or talk to) to your characters?
While I am a non-fiction writer, I do interact extensively with the “characters” of the machine economy: Autonomous AI Agents. My interaction with them involves rigorous behavioral modeling and game-theoretic pressure testing.

When mapping out scenes like the one in “A Day in the Life: 2035,” I am constantly evaluating how an agent like “Nate” would react to real-time supply chain data, health metrics, or zero-knowledge identity requests without human oversight. I don’t “talk” to them in a literary sense; instead, I simulate their algorithmic decision-making loops to ensure they remain cryptographically aligned with human stewardship rather than corporate exploitation.

What advice would you give other writers?
My primary advice is to write with skepticism and edit with courage. Do not write to simply repeat industry buzzwords or to flatter the pre-existing biases of your audience. If your work is going to be the basis for how people understand the future, it must survive intense internal stress tests.

Be willing to throw away entire sections of your work if they do not serve the reader’s clarity. If it takes you years and dozens of revisions to make a complex concept elegant and accessible, put in the work. True impact lies in execution and readability, not speculation.

How did you decide how to publish your books?
For my books, including Web4: The Age of Autonomous Intelligence, the decision of how to publish comes down to a balance of global accessibility, speed to market, and maintaining absolute content integrity. Because technology cycles move at an unprecedented velocity, waiting years in traditional publishing backlogs can render a forward-looking technological blueprint obsolete before it hits the shelves.

I opt for agile publishing frameworks across multiple digital formats (including PDF, Kindle, Mobi, and Epub) alongside physical rollouts (Hardback and Paperback) to ensure the community can access the insights instantly and globally. For new authors exploring the space, I highly advise prioritizing digital-first distribution and open accessibility. If your goal is to empower a global community, your infrastructure must allow you to bypass geographic and corporate gatekeepers seamlessly.

What do you think about the future of book publishing?
The future of book publishing is on the verge of its own agentic turn. We are transitioning away from a passive distribution model toward an era of intelligent, context-aware content ingestion. By 2035, fully autonomous AI agents will account for a massive percentage of digital decision-making, and this includes how information is parsed and consumed.

Books will no longer be static, inert files sitting on a digital shelf. Instead, they will act as dynamic, verifiable knowledge repositories that personal AI agents can query, verify via cryptographic audit trails, and instantly synthesize to assist humans in real-time problem solving. The future of publishing belongs to authors who write structured, high-integrity content that can seamlessly integrate into the cognitive and trust layers of tomorrow’s web.

What genres do you write?: Bitcoin & Cryptocurrencies, Technology & Infrastructure, Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence, Decentralized Finance (DeFi) & Blockchain Governance, Macroeconomics & Digital Sovereignty

 

Source: https://bookgoodies.com/interview-with-author-anndy-lian/

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.