My problem is less with the holodeck stuff (even though it's so typical for Forever Alone Geordi to fall for a hologram of a woman he's never met), but with the way he acts when real Leah Brahms is on board.
there are no regulations against recreating cewmembers on the holodeck
They way I always saw is it was people who both had bad people skills simply having those flaws be exposed. You even see it in the opening scenes. He asumes she will be into him because of a holodeck character and is all nerdy around Guinan and she seems to hate him without even meeting him because the moment she arrives the first thing she says is basically to insult him for screwing up her engines.My problem is less with the holodeck stuff (even though it's so typical for Forever Alone Geordi to fall for a hologram of a woman he's never met), but with the way he acts when real Leah Brahms is on board.
But Geordi DID crteate the 'Leah Personality' program - when he first called up the image of Leah, it was just a computer interface, until:Given that Geordi didn't create the program, just use it. I'm not sure that's on him. Certainly per Hollow Pursists there are no regulations against recreating cewmembers on the holodeck (although Bajoran/Federation law does prohibit simulation for sexual purposes without consent thus providing a benchmark.
[Utopia Planitia Drafting room]
LAFORGE: 452 through system L-575.
COMPUTER: Adjustments to dilithium crystal chamber complete.
LAFORGE: Impact analysis, computer.
COMPUTER: Warp energy has increased fourteen percent. Reactants per unit time remaining steady.
LAFORGE: Yes! All right! Computer, do you have any, you know, personality on file for Doctor Brahms?
COMPUTER: Starfleet personality profile analysis, stardate 40056.
LAFORGE: Did she ever debate at the intergalactic caucuses on Chaya Seven?
COMPUTER: Doctor Brahms attended Chaya Seven caucuses on the following stardates
LAFORGE: Never mind the dates. Computer, if you add data from all these sources, could you synthesise a true representation of Doctor Brahms?
COMPUTER: There would be a nine point three seven percent margin of error in the interactive responses from the facsimile.
LAFORGE: I can live with that. Do it. (Leah takes a breath, then smiles) Doctor Brahms?
LEAH: Geordi, it's me, Leah. Don't start calling me Doctor Brahms or I'll call you Commander La Forge.
LAFORGE: Right.
LEAH: Now, we've managed to maintain energy but we can't leave it in this realignment forever without burning out components, so we need to move quickly.
(Geordi's jaw is on the floor)
LEAH: Are you with me?
LAFORGE: Yeah. Yeah! Yeah!.
Citation?(although Bajoran/Federation law does prohibit simulation for sexual purposes without consent thus providing a benchmark)
My problem is less with the holodeck stuff (even though it's so typical for Forever Alone Geordi to fall for a hologram of a woman he's never met), but with the way he acts when real Leah Brahms is on board.
But Geordi DID crteate the 'Leah Personality' program - when he first called up the image of Leah, it was just a computer interface, until:
And like other in the thread have stated, I too was more appalled at how he treat the REAL Leah Brahms. had he just stayed with his personal simulation on the Holodeck, and not tried to use personal info he gleaned from the simulation in his attempt to get romantic with the real Leah Brahms - I would have an issue with his character in the episode.
Citation?
A hologram is on a whole 'nother level. It's not just a picture of someone, it's an active simulation of that person. In a very real sense, it IS that person.
It could EVEN be (given that this is Star Trek) that he wasn't even referring to the original Leah Brahms *at all*, but to the holodeck version of her brought into "the real world" by some mechanism of technology brought back by Voyager, or by whatever the heck that was that left the ship in "Emergence", or however else. There were implications to the mention of that name, but not enough to solidly say that Geordi was a scoundrel in any way.
I don't appreciate the bigoted tone you're taking toward photonic life forms in this post.Geordi, as sad as it may seem, ended up "marrying" a holoprogram and having kids (real or holographic? Does the 2390s Federation allow cloning for individuals without a viable partner?).
That's pretty unfair. We don't know the events leading up to Geordi's coupling with Leah, mentioned in the show's finale. We don't even really know if it's the same Leah, but assuming that in all likelihood it is, (as he mentions her heading up the Daestrom institute) she could've been long divorced or whatever before anything developed. It was just a very weakly written one-off comment, to try to give some kind of flushed out later life for Geordi, who didn't have much of a personal history to draw from. I'd never take it in a negative light like thatSo not only is Geordi a creepy stalker, he's also a homewrecker.
I can't buy that either. You're talking about likeness rights, & the only legal ground I could see being infringed regarding it would be defamation etc... IF someone like Quark were profiting on distribution of said simulations, kind of like what a celeb might do if someone were circulating realistic faked nudes, but if some Joe Blow is doing some sims in private, it is mighty Orwellian to think that should be policedA hologram is on a whole 'nother level. It's not just a picture of someone, it's an active simulation of that person. In a very real sense, it IS that person. That alone is sufficient to give the person being simulated a moral (and also legal) right to know who's simulating them and why. And the right to order it shut down if the subject wishes it.
Not only is it basic privacy rights, it's simple decency as well.
That's pretty unfair. We don't know the events leading up to Geordi's coupling with Leah, mentioned in the show's finale. We don't even really know if it's the same Leah, but assuming that in all likelihood it is, (as he mentions her heading up the Daestrom institute) she could've been long divorced or whatever before anything developed. It was just a very weakly written one-off comment, to try to give some kind of flushed out later life for Geordi, who didn't have much of a personal history to draw from. I'd never take it in a negative light like that
I know you're winking, but I never saw it as an illusion. Q plays with alternate realities the way we'd play with Tinkertoys. The two out-of-time realities were probably just as real as the one in which we began and ended. The way I see it, it's like Q just crimped the multiverse of "Parallels" to move Picard among three realities or timelines. Part of the point that Q was making to Picard is that Federation technology is capable of altering reality. The main deflector dish is an amazing thing!Then again, the entirety of "All Good Things" was an illusion created by Q, so there's no reason to take anything in it seriously. Including Leah's mention.![]()
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.