The American drama released in 2020 tells that with the development of science and technology, facing the accidental death of aging, human beings store the memory and personality of the dying person in a large database by digitizing the conscious memory, and rebuild it in the virtual world. Their image allows them to survive in another form.
Here are some thought-provoking points:
First of all, just like choosing a cemetery in real life, the virtual environment for data uploading and storage is also very different. The rich still do whatever they want, eat food they couldn’t eat before they were alive, and enjoy top-notch services, while the poor need to be careful about the time for data activation. Only 2G of data can be used for a month. When the male protagonist sees the shocking situation, his brain thinks too fast, and the data time is instantly cleared and turned into a static image.
Secondly, when choosing uploading and treatment, I can choose, but once uploaded, there is only a bunch of data left, and the owners of the data may be parents, lovers, children or friends, and I no longer belong to myself. Yes, it belongs to a certain person, and the holder has the right to delete the data and completely erase the existence of the data object. At this time, the existence of the data itself is powerless.
Finally, if you rely too much on believing in technological intelligence, why can you upload your own data, because every aspect of your life has been recorded. In the play, it is ironic that the so-called safest driverless car is still recognized as no abnormality in the event of a malfunction, which is also the cause of the protagonist's car accident. Is there any real security? Maybe it's all relative.
At the end of the tenth episode of the first season, the protagonist, as a programmer, has obtained code permission even though he is already data. What he is looking forward to more is his imagination about the freedom of data in the world of uoload, everyone's freedom, and the opening of new plug-ins through code.
An immature impression, above.
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