Technology is good technology, but it's always a little scary.

Sylvia 2022-11-16 09:05:04

Is it my problem? After reading it, my intuitive feeling is that it is too scary.

This technology looks good on the surface, but it is very scary to think about it.

After Nathan's car accident, there were two options in the hospital. The first was surgery, but it was risky. The second was uploading consciousness to the cloud. Ingrid decided to upload it.

Is this the choice that needs to be made in the hospital with this technology? Since there is hope to successfully survive the surgery and continue to enjoy the beauty of the real world we think, why not go? It sounds good to upload and say that people's consciousness lives permanently in the cloud, and there is no concept of death, but isn't this death? Even if you can make a video call over the Internet like a netizen, even if you can clearly feel his presence by touching gloves and other equipment, isn't it all fake?

I always feel that Ingrid's choice to upload Nathan is a murder. She is not a legal wife, but a girlfriend. What qualifications does she have to make this decision, and what qualifications does she have to persuade Nathan to make this decision. This is not a reversible process, at least not in the year 2033 set by the plot. If one day you can download and realize clones, then the ethical relationship in this world may be in chaos.

And in the finale, Ingrid actually chose to upload for Nathan, which is indeed enough to witness how fervently she loves him, but if Nathan had the surgery, would he still be able to love for many years in the real world. I'm again frightened by Ingrid's decision to commit suicide rather than upload.

There are two lines in the whole plot, one is the love line of the male protagonist, and the other is the conspiracy line of the male protagonist's company. From the ending, the first line becomes more complicated, as Ingrid chooses to stay in the same "heaven" as Nathan, and Nora realizes that even after knowing that Nathan is the man who sold his dreams for money, he is not far from him end; the second line also gets more complicated because the first 9 episodes have been telling us that Nathan was murdered, what exactly was his friend Jason hiding, and who actually deleted Nathan's memory, yet the last episode tells We, the deleted memory is actually reversed to Nathan seeing the money. There may be two explanations. The first is that this reset memory has actually been modified. The second is that this memory is a fact. As for why he was murdered , then it depends on what more subversive explanation will be given later.

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