"A natural guess is that... a black hole's entropy is... proportional to its volume. But in the 1970s and Stephen Hawking discovered that this isn't right. Their... analyses showed that the entropy... is proportional to the area of its ... less than what we'd naïvely guess. ...Berkenstein and Hawking found that... each square being one by one Planck length... the black hole's entropy equals the number of such squares that can fit on its surface... each Planck square is a minimal unit of space, and each carries a minimal, single unit of entropy. This suggests that there is nothing, even in principle, that can take place within a Planck square, because any such activity could support disorder and hence the Planck square could contain more than a single unit of entropy... Once again... we are led to the notion of an elemental spatial entity."
January 1, 1970
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Entropy_(thermodynamics)