Popped this off in the Murderbot Diaries server when the matter of identifying as inhuman came up in context of the Murderbot Diaries universe, and how AGIs, constructs, bots, etc. might react.

In Eclipse Phase there's a faction called Mercurials, they're part of the autonomists, a rather anarchic collective of tendencies. As I recall, their main concerns are organizing and fighting for the needs and rights of AGIs, uplifts, and other nonhumans.

My Eclipse Phase character Monaura no longer identifies as human. The available body when she escaped Earth's rather violent new situation was off somehow. Every sensation felt too strong, as if she had a constant migraine all the time. She tried to make the best of it, but the organizations she was part of that had started as a casual time killing thing became a high-control group laundering its bullshit through politics and therapy language. Being divergent already, it was like blood in the water. So she ceased considering herself human; nobody else felt she was up to snuff for that anyway. She now lives full time as an infomorph, a fully digital intelligence, specializing in VR art primarily devoted to making very surreal experiences, as those are the experiences she's most comfortable with now.
But she hasn't tried to actually join the Mercurial faction, since she doesn't really feel like someone with dubious human privilege should be trying to join a faction for uplifted animals, AGIs and other nonhumans. So she just kinda doesn't fit in either space, but she manages to live in spaces primarily for nonhumans and is always quick to help others in those spaces. But I was working through a… lot… of little traumas about not belonging in any community when I wrote her out.

I may talk about her again. I miss playing her.


#science-fiction #transhuman #eclipse-phase #monaura
I Want to Become a #Machine - SoundCloud - I Want to Become a #Machine di Mircea Creami su #SoundCloud #Transhuman #Machine
https://on.soundcloud.com/OWLjUzpTOSpRC3XXGg
I Want to Become a Machine

I Want to Become a Machine: In a reality marked by vulgarity, the collapse of ideals, powerlessness, and widespread ugliness, the song suggests that technology may represent a different path forward

SoundCloud
❤️❤️❤️ Played for Lia: ♬ Neon Songs Cinematic Deluxe Edition v5: Wired for Eternity: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzGcZ-cWmQs #Transhuman #Cyber #Binary #Love 🆙 #game #changer SUNO P #AI #related and #new #style of #UTAU #vocaloid #ボーカロイド #music #音楽 #udio #kaiber #producer #business #industry #entertainment 🌎 #global #community #news New Idols, Stars and Character(s) for us to love ❤️ ❧
Neon Songs Cinematic Deluxe Edition v5: Wired for Eternity

YouTube

New #transhuman body mod centre opens up at the mall.
75% off the first bod-job.
Assume tech has MOST bugs ironed out.
What's the mod you get (specials menu)

#cyberpunk #bodymod #scfi

22mm pistol finger (pew pew)
0%
Boobs (+/-)
0%
Headwire (Internet)
16.7%
Fun pinkbits
10%
Radio nipples
13.3%
Mediatronic forearm (Plays media, e-tats)
0%
Eyecam with replay
13.3%
Full main muscles upgrade (Special price not available for this mod)
16.7%
Head skill slot
23.3%
GTFO you sleazy clanker. 100% biological you disgusting tin peddler.
6.7%
Poll ended at .

Forever disappointed that Post Malone is not the posthuman version of a baseline called Malone.

Tattoos do not make a posthuman, they're not even moving.....

#PostMalone #PostHuman #Transhuman

@ennopark
The #Transhuman plot kinda takes over after the 2nd episode. I found it interesting, but somehow, these recent stories (like #BSG and #WestWorld) always miss the first, most horrific part of transhumanism, exemplified in the protocols from #Robocop. These stories propose that artificial transhumans, manufactured by coorporations, will be totally free to think and move, and not have hard shutdown contingencies curbing their free will. 😵‍💫

#AlienEarth

In Seth Haddon's queer, transhuman, romantic, cyberpunk, science fiction novella "Volatile Memory," masks are used as digital assistants and ID...and, in one case, to house a special A.I. To find out what that means, and more, check out this exclusive interview.
https://paulsemel.com/exclusive-interview-volatile-memory-author-seth-haddon/
📖🪶
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
#SethHaddon #SethHaddonInterview #SethHaddonVolatileMemory #SethHaddonVolatileMemoryInterview #ScienceFiction #SciFi #SciFiBooks #Cyberpunk #Queer #Transhuman
In Seth Haddon's queer, transhuman, romantic, cyberpunk, science fiction novella "Volatile Memory," masks are used as digital assistants and ID...and, in one case, to house a special A.I. To find out what that means, and more, check out this exclusive interview.
https://paulsemel.com/exclusive-interview-volatile-memory-author-seth-haddon/
📖🪶
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
#SethHaddon #SethHaddonInterview #SethHaddonVolatileMemory #SethHaddonVolatileMemoryInterview #Books #Reading #AuthorInterview #AuthorInterviews #BookTok #ScienceFiction #SciFi #SciFiBooks #Cyberpunk #Queer #Transhuman
Transhumanism (no I'm not talking about transexuals) has always interested me.

Things like embedding tiny magnets sounds pretty neat, though I don't think I'll ever do that. An MRI sounds like it would end in disaster. Maybe one day I might try finger magnets. (You can also super glue tiny magnets to the outside of your fingers as a less permanent trial.

One thing I've been thinking would be really cool would be an artificial completely clear cornea. Your short wave cones cells do actually respond to UV light, but your cornea blocks it.

Though it might get old. UV scatters pretty aggressively in atmosphere and would look very hazy. But you could always just filter it out with sunglasses or contact lenses.

Obviously this is way beyond my ability to do, but it's neat to think about.

#trans #transhuman #bodymodification

Not Till We Are Lost

Not Till We Are Lost is the fifth Bobiverse book by Dennis Taylor. I’ve been following these books for years. Although there’s usually a delay in reading new releases because they’re initially exclusive to Audible. I do listen to the occasional audiobook, but most of my reading is Kindle editions. Thankfully they subsequently get released under Kindle Unlimited, which is nice.

The Bob in these books starts out as a software engineer in life who dies in an accident, and wakes up in the future to discover he’s now an uploaded mind and forced by the reigning theocracy to be the control system for a self replicating Von Neumann probe. He is barely launched before a devastating war desolates the earth. He explores other solar systems and makes copies of himself, some of which return to Earth to help the remaining human populations migrate to other worlds. In the meantime his replicas encounter other alien species, both hostile and friendly, and have a variety of adventures.

The stories are told in first person, with each chapter from the view of a particular replicant. Each replicant has a unique name, and there is “replicant drift” with each copy, leading each replica to have a slightly different personality. Initially the replicants are all recognizably Bob, but as the series progresses, the drift leads to major differences, and conflict.

Initially this is sort of hard sci-fi, with interstellar travel taking years. The “sort of” refers to the fact that the propulsion system of Bob’s ship is a type of reactionless drive. As things develop, the Bobs figure out how to communicate with each other faster than light, allowing an interstellar community to develop. And the reasons for the “replicative drift” are thought to involve quantum entanglement.

In this latest book, a group of Bobs, called the “Skippies”, are trying to create an artificial intelligence, something that, despite the success of mind uploading, has eluded human science. But in the fourth book, an alien AI is discovered, who turns out to be friendly, and provides advice on how to build AIs. Except in this book the Skippies cut corners, which leads the AI, named “Thoth”, to behave in ways that, at least on the surface, seem resonant with all the typical tropes of a dangerous AI.

At the same time, a couple of Bobs are exploring toward the galactic center of the galaxy, and come across a network of wormholes, and a highly advanced civilization that appears to be completely abandoned, although a lot of the automation in that civilization continues to work. They spend the book resolving the mystery of what happened.

There are also rising tensions with human populations, with growing resentment against the Bobs and other replicants, while the theocracy that had originally enslaved Bob’s mind is making a comeback. And there a side adventure with one of the Bobs and his wife as they use avatars to interact with another alien species, one that looks like human sized dragons.

This is a fun book and I recommend it, although I strongly suggest starting with the first book of the series.

I do have a few nits.

These books have never had tightly structured plots, with many of the threads meandering over time. In the early books, it didn’t feel like too much of an issue. The concept was fresh and it was an interesting exploration of the various implications. But I felt it in this one. It seems to take the story a long time to really get going, and some of the side threads felt pretty tedious.

I also could have used a bit more recap about all the various situations, developments, and technologies from the earlier books. Most of these are just referred to by name with the reader expected to remember the details. I read the first three books in 2017, and the fourth in 2023. I don’t have time to reread the whole series every time a new book comes out. Certainly some authors take this too far, and burn too much space constantly reminding us about everything, but having brief refreshers at least once in a book for relevant situations is a lot easier on the reader.

Finally, without getting into spoilers, the explanation for the disappeared civilization felt improbable. Not that I don’t believe it can happen, just that the idea of it developing at a point in cosmic history right when we might be able to do something about it strikes me as a little too convenient. Of course, this is fairly common in sci-fi, but it tends to briefly throw me out of the story.

All that said, if you enjoyed the earlier books, you’ll likely enjoy this one. And I definitely recommend the series overall. Have you read any of it? If so, what did you think?

#bookReview #bookReviews #posthuman #sciFi #ScienceFiction #SciFi #SpaceOpera #Transhuman