Virtual Immortality

From: Rick Knight (rknight@platinum.com)
Date: Mon Jun 30 1997 - 10:59:37 MDT


     John Blanco-Losada wrote:
     Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University envision a huge multimedia
     database that could store minute-by-minute details of your waking
     life, all packed on a hard disk the size of a quarter.
     
     Hara Ra responded:
     
     Imagine searching though all that raw data for interesting stuff. Puts
     home movies to shame. What about extra legal activities?? What about
     stuff considered private, like excretion? As a cryonicist I might find
     it useful though....
     
     Rick Knight adds:
     
     This reminds me of the tremendous amount of documents from the tobacco
     industry that had to be sifted through to determine the level of
     accountability by the tobacco industry on their cover-up and
     conversion. Prior to scanning and locating technology, it would take
     a team of individuals YEARS to pour through it all. Now, they scanned
     all the docs into Adobe Acrobat and did programmed searches for
     keywords and found substantial amounts of evidence. $368.5 billion
     later (hopefully more...)...<G>
     
     <Just had to get a dig in against one of he most vile empires on the
     planet but back to the original thread>
     
     Presumably, by the time we can achieve virtual immortality through
     mass storage of a life's experiences, we will have also developed
     intelligent agents to bookmark, condense or otherwise streamline the
     experiences so that we got the most relevant stuff.
     
     Of course, this also leads to some pretty (presently, in my view)
     strange fetish practices if you could indeed chain all one's "potty"
     moments into a digest.
     
     The issue of privacy, the individual's decision as to what to and NOT
     to include seems like it would factor in. If it were a ubiquitious
     thing, I'd likely just (like Data shutting off his emotion chip in the
     last Star Trek movie) flick off the recording with an intention and/or
     flick of my head during a private moment. But boy would I love the
     opportunity to observe my own boyhood and compare my perception with
     the one I have today. Particularly, re-experiencing some of my
     "firsts" would be quite illuminating.
     
     Rick
     



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