wintorez 3 years ago

I went from bored to confused to fascinated to horrified in matter of minutes.

  • peddling-brink 3 years ago

    Read more of qntm’s stuff. It’s really good.

  • hnbad 3 years ago

    I experienced all four of these emotional states when I read the word "tebibyte" in a story set at least 50-ish years in the future.

saagarjha 3 years ago

This is one of my favorite science fiction short stories, simply by how matter-of-fact it is and how reasonable it sounds. A lot of science fiction requires jumps in human nature (global cooperation? An obvious "good"? Everyone has turned into a self-centered egotist?) but this one just moves predictably, if horrifyingly.

  • lloeki 3 years ago

    Same vein, same kind of progressively horrifying pacing. It reads oh so easily and has been the basis of many many technical, philosophical, and theological discussions with friends, some of which were dead on "not into science fiction", and which this story changed their mind about.

    https://qntm.org/responsibility

FartyMcFarter 3 years ago

Imagine an instance of MMAcevedo running under homomorphic encryption [1] on a cloud service.

In this case, is the cloud service an unwilling and unknowing participant in slavery and torture?

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homomorphic_encryption

  • sbierwagen 3 years ago

    Amusingly enough, another qntm story also mentions human emulations running in homomorphic encrypted computing environment, though to say which would be a Spoiler.

isoprophlex 3 years ago

Incredible, thanks for sharing.

Qntm's longer works of fiction are highly recommended, too!

amptorn 3 years ago

The story's name is "Lena", not "MMAcevedo".

  • MengerSponge 3 years ago

    And that's a reference to the (now deprecated) reference image of Lena scanned from Playboy magazine.

ncmncm 3 years ago

This person also wrote "There is no anti-mimetics division", a terrifying SCP file.

PoignardAzur 3 years ago

I love the list of "See Also" articles at the end.

So evocative.

ncr100 3 years ago

Future history, mind-machine manipulation, scary.

gmuslera 3 years ago

Those that promote the idea of having Digital Selves are making a typo there. The right term is Digital Slaves.