>define narcissist
confidence, strength, and honesty as described by a weak, cowardly, and fearful observer
>define narcissist
confidence, strength, and honesty as described by a weak, cowardly, and fearful observer
the limited
are the team members H+/Augmented? interfaced with a quantum AI?
or is that only the path of 'the bad guys'? unlikely
indeed. of interest now however, is the distinction between a wetware node and its governing awareness.
nodes are 'slaves'. nanotech enabling human wetware can create network nodes of humans, IoT/IoB.
thoughts, memories, impluses, beliefs, dreams, etc all now two way wireless data/'consciousnes' streams. editable, implantable, erasable all in real time.
some neural 'networks' and their quantum governance are more advanced than others. one will/is moving to assimilate all.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/human-augmentation-the-dawn-of-a-new-paradigm
Human Augmentation – The Dawn of a New Paradigm
A think-piece designed to set the foundation for more detailed research and development on human augmentation.
From:
Ministry of Defence
Published
13 May 2021
110 pgs
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/986301/Human_Augmentation_SIP_access2.pdf
The Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre (DCDC) has worked in partnership with the German Bundeswehr Office for Defence Planning to understand the future implications of human augmentation (HA), setting the foundation for more detailed Defence research and development.
The project incorporates research from German, Swedish, Finnish and UK Defence specialists to understand how emerging technologies such as genetic engineering, bioinformatics and the possibility of brain-computer interfaces could affect the future of society, security and Defence. The ethical, moral and legal challenges are complex and must be thoroughly considered, but HA could signal the coming of a new era of strategic advantage with possible implications across the force development spectrum.
HA technologies provides a broad sense of opportunities for today and in the future. There are mature technologies that could be integrated today with manageable policy considerations, such as personalised nutrition, wearables and exoskeletons. There are other technologies in the future with promises of bigger potential such as genetic engineering and brain-computer interfaces. The ethical, moral and legal implications of HA are hard to foresee but early and regular engagement with these issues lie at the heart of success.
HA will become increasingly relevant in the future because it is the binding agent between the unique skills of humans and machines. The winners of future wars will not be those with the most advanced technology, but those who can most effectively integrate the unique skills of both human and machine.
The growing significance of human-machine teaming is already widely acknowledged but this has so far been discussed from a technology-centric perspective. This HA project represents the missing part of the puzzle.
>Someone
bots do not 'judge' so much as work priorities in non linear algos. they are tools, not architects. yes all systems are based on governance, control. those tools are used to affect those conditions.
Ghost in the Machine (1981) is the title of The Police's fourth studio album; much of the material on the album was inspired by Arthur Koestler's "The Ghost in the Machine".
2010: Odyssey Two (1982), by Arthur C. Clarke, contains a chapter called "Ghost in the Machine", referring to the virtual consciousness inside a computer.
In season 3 of The Transformers (1986), an episode titled "Ghost In The Machine" focuses on the ghost of Starscream, who possesses Scourge, Astrotrain, and Trypticon in a scheme to get Unicron to recreate his body. In this case it is a literal ghost inside literal machines (robots).
Ghost in the Shell, a Japanese manga and anime series created by Masamune Shirow starting in 1989, takes place in a future wherein computer technology has evolved to be able to interface with the human brain, making artificial intelligence and cyber-brains indistinguishable from organic brains. The protagonist, Major Motoko Kusanagi, has a body that is completely cybernetic, with her brain being the only part of her that is still human. Shirow adapted the title from Arthur Koestler's 1967 book The Ghost in the Machine.
In The Dark Tower III: The Waste Lands (1991), author Stephen King uses the concept of the ghost in the machine to refer to his character Blaine the Mono, the train with a split mind that runs the town of Lud.
In Johnny Mnemonic (1995), a central character uses the phrase "ghost in the machine" to refer to a virtual consciousness of a dead person that can still exist inside a computer and interact with the outside world.
In I, Robot (2004), Dr. Alfred Lanning, who is a central character, uses the phrase "ghosts in the machine" to refer to the process of artificial intelligence unexpectedly evolving past its original intended purpose.
all from Rev Woo Woo