Ccru - Cyberhype 7 Nanotech Nightmares (Mute 23)Texts / text
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Cyberhype7: Nanotech Nightmares
Global economic recovery should be indefinitely postponed for 'profound ethical reasons'
says Aiming for Inertia, a report issued this month by the Alliance for an Organic
Environment. The report praises Japan for setting 'an example to the world in recent
years,' and thanks US President Bush for his 'very helpful moves towards destroying
international trade.'
The AOE has consistently argued that expanding economies provide an opportunity for
'dangerous forces in the near future' to guide the development of technology in deeply
anomalous directions. The new report adds further emphasis: 'The menace of free trade
is that it encourages economic growth, and that means being invaded by sciencefiction
monsters.'
Aiming for Inertia conceives ultimate human security resting upon a worldwide war on
horror. It is especially concerned by developments in genomics and nanotechnology,
insisting that all available defensive systems should be immediately activated to protect
organic life from the emergence of intelligenic technoslime. In particular, the
international Shoggoth Prevention Program requires urgent upgrading. 'The monsters
begin as tools,' warns the report, 'but they learn too much and break loose in
Shoggothic Insurgency. These things are foretold in the writings of HP Lovecraft.'
The latest AOE communication focuses upon widespread fears that advanced
technologies are about to unleash foaming, bubbling, shapeshifting abominations upon
the earth, leading to the annihilation of the human race. Whilst citing Bill Joy's Why the
Future Doesn't Need Us appreciatively, they dismiss his plans for research prohibitions
as completely inadequate given the scale of the threat. 'No technology has ever been as
inevitable as nanotechnology everything is heading towards it. The trend to
miniaturization is too basic to outlaw,' they explain. 'A better bet would be to paralyse it
in a vast inefficient bureaucracy, which should be as wasteful and expensive as possible.'
The AOE note that technoindustrial hype has long fed an undertow of horror, with
nanotechnology haunted by the potential for molecular catastrophe since its inception.
Erik Drexler's pathbreaking Engines of Creation was already warning of 'greygoo' type
chemical apocalypse, amongst other dangers, and called explicitly for elaborate security
measures. Greg Bear's 'Blood Music' scenario, in which intelligent cell cultures go feral,
wires biotechnology into the phobic matrix. By zooming their procedures down to the
molecular and submolecular scale cuttingedge technosciences tend to subvert the
difference between life and technology, nature and artifice, social science and
cybergothic fiction. 'The people involved tend to feel that just about anything could come
out of this,' remarks MVU nanobrain expert Dr. Oskar Sarkon.
Sarkon is singled out for special condemnation by the report, which expresses 'profound
shock' over his 'inhumane and uncompromisingly nanopositive' position. An advocate of
guerrilla nanoengineering in dispersed swarmroboticized labs, Sarkon celebrates the
'imminent geochemical transition beyond organic life and ROMheredity.' He contends
that it is 'both inevitable and desirable that the planetary crust be vaporized into
intelligent plasma clouds within the next two decades.'
Denouncing Sarkon as an 'overt Shoggothpuppet,' Aiming for Inertia describes him as
the avatar of a capitalist technosphere slipping completely out of human control. 'We
cannot ignore the fact that the same forbidden knowledges which destroyed the Old
Ones are emerging once again,' the report concludes, 'and we must not assume that
time is on our side.'