That sound like the kind of world you want to live in?
Irrelevant. Whether you want to or not, the option will be foisted upon you. If you hold out, you become obsolete.
That sound like the kind of world you want to live in?
To further explain: Norton protects my laptop and phone, Lifelock protects my identity, and my credit union has been damn good about protecting my account. There are countermeasures in this battle.
Inspired by technology presented in Ghost in the Shell, the fiction I've been working on since 2008 has people with symbiotic, nanotech computronium within their bodies, something I call a "weave", and what Elon Musk recently envisioned as a "neural lace", that is essentially all our devices and social media (and more) in your head. Of course, a person has to have ways to protect themselves against hacking and malware.
If it can be done, it will be done.
I read a novel where people had digitised themselves - when your body dies, a new one is made and the 'soul'/person-content installed. In that world, a lot of people were against that kind of immortality. How was the social unrest solved? The immortals waited for the vintage-people to die out.![]()
Dear God nothing sounds worse. I actually rather like being human.
I'm torn now.......
Once in a computer the possibilities could be limitless. As your mind expands into the system and you find you can travel anywhere, learn anything, would you want to go back into a body?
Or you could experience a hell you never knew before, for eternity.
Plural "you", not personal "you".Is that a threat?
Being designed to seek power is one thing, augmenting humans so that you slow down the aging process, make humans have a longer life span and increase human strength by a factor of say 100% is another. Compared to our ancestors of 500 years ago who died at 40 and had rotten teeth and were only 5 foot 4 due to bad health. We are augmented!Khan and his ilk were literally designed to seek power. They can't NOT rule. I'm sure you've heard the phrase "superior ability breeds superior ambition"?Given this, I can entirely understand the Federation's ban on genetic engineering.
I mean, what do you think would have happened if the Augments had WON the Eugenics Wars? Genetic engineering would be required for all, and nobody would be able to "opt out". That sound like the kind of world you want to live in?
The writer chose to go down that road another Myriad universe could have an enhanced benevolent Khan where there is no Eugenics War who rescues aliens from the dreaded Klingon empire.Ask Princeps Julian Bashir and Helot Ezri Dax of the Khanate warship Defiance. (Star Trek: Myriad Universes novel Seeds of Dissent)
Early 20th century the horseless carriage was a threat to the blacksmith industry. Now cars are as common as mud.Considering we can't even get everyone to switch to cashless payment systems, much less some doohickey embedded in your brain, I don't expect this will be A Thing anytime soon. Maybe 20 years out, or later, for mainstream adoption.
We're just now getting RFID-based credit cards out there as a commonplace technology.
Early 20th centyury the horseless carriage was a threat to the blacksmith industry. Now cars are as common as mud.
And the technology band plays onAnd?
And the technology band plays on
Keep sitting on that nail...And?
I'm sitting here waiting for you to make a point.
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