“No computers.” the guard said harshly, holding out a metal box.

I put my phone in the box. He didn’t budge. I took off my smart watch and added it in.

“Are you sure you have no more computers? The detector sends out a brief EMP. It would be a shame to destroy any gadgets. Or injure you." He was staring at the side of my face.

Ah. I removed the Connex from my temple. I’d forgotten it was there.

He ushered me into what looked like an old electronic doorway, then pressed a button. A light flashed.

"You're free to enter. Enjoy." No smile.

I passed through a corridor to desk where a receptionist smiled. "First time?"

"Yes, is it obvious?"

"Don't worry. It's simple. Through the double doors there you'll find the main selection of books, by era and topic. It's colour-coded and easy to follow. You'll need these if you want to touch anything." She put a paper mask and thin laboratory gloves on the desk.

"Behind you is the iffy section, as we call it. Books printed after 2015."

"2015?! I thought AI printed books only appeared in the mid 2020s."

"That's probably true, but we can't be sure. Preserving authentic pre-AI knowledge is our raison d'être. We can't be too safe."

Her look turned serious and I saw the devotion to the cause in her eyes. Since the Big Corruption of '32, no digital files could be trusted to replicate original human knowledge. This library was a time capsule.

"Can books be taken out?"

"No, I'm afraid not. We couldn't let them back in, as they could be fakes."

"So, can I copy things? My phone and Connex were taken away. Do you have a camera to message me chapters?"

"No, we're strictly machine-free. but we have several scribes. They're very good." She was enjoying my puzzled look.

"They can copy down whole pages for you. With pen and paper," she answered my unspoken question.

"Pen and paper?" these were words of tales and myths.

"Come, I'll show."

#devotion #MastoPrompt #microfiction #AI #ArtificialIntelligence

@noam I enjoyed this but I had problems suspending disbelief when I encountered scribes as the only choice. While I may be a fountain pen enthusiast and enjoy writing on paper, I wondered why the library in this would not make full use of mechanisms that predate the introduction of the computer. In particular photographic reproductions such as microfilm were quite normal for decades and this fictional library likely has newspaper archives on microfilm.

If they're concerned with knowledge preservation they should be well aware of the risks of transcription errors from scribes.

@gravepapaya @noam I guess it was because of the great corruption of '32
Maybe we couldn't trust microfilm reproduction either since the last machines to do those were digital, too?

@benjamin @gravepapaya @noam

Guess mechanical typewriter were museum pieces by then, with no ribbon manufacturers left.

@M0KHR @benjamin @gravepapaya @noam They'd all been stripped for parts to be made into, and sold as craft and art projects, by the late 2020s