Accelerando - Charles Stross (classic books for 10 year olds .txt) 📗
- Author: Charles Stross
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hair braided in cornrows, watches him - as does Pierre, a protective
arm around her shoulders. They’re - Amber Macx? That’s his mother? She
looks far too young, too much in love with Pierre. “Amber!” he says,
approaching the couple.
“Yeah? You’re, uh, my mystery child-support litigant?” Her smile is
distinctly unfriendly as she continues: “Can’t say I’m entirely
pleased to meet you, under the circumstances, although I should thank
you for the spread.”
“I -” His tongue sticks to the roof of his mouth. “It’s not like
that.”
“What’s it supposed to be like?” she asks sharply. jabbing a finger at
him: “You know damn well I’m not your mother. So what’s it all about,
huh? You know damn well I’m nearly bankrupt, too, so it’s not as if
you’re after my pocket lint. What do you want from me?”
Her vehemence takes him aback. This sharp-edged aggressive woman isn’t
his mother, and the introverted cleric - believer - on the other side
isn’t his father, either. “I ha-ha-had to stop you heading for the
inner system,” he says, speech center hitting deadlock before his
antistutter mod can cut in. “They’ll eat you alive down there. Your
other half left behind substantial debts, and they’ve been bought up
by the most predatory - “
“Runaway corporate instruments,” she states, calmly enough. “Fully
sentient and self-directed.”
“How did you know?” he asks, worried.
She looks grim. “I’ve met them before.” It’s a very familiar grim
expression, one he knows intimately, and that feels wrong coming from
this near stranger. “We visited some weird places, while we were
away.” She glances past him, focuses on someone else, and breathes in
sharply as her face goes blank. “Quickly, tell me what your scheme is.
Before Mom gets here.”
“Mind archiving and history mergers. Back yourself up, pick different
life courses, see which ones work and which don’t - no need to be a
failure, just hit the ‘reload game’ icon and resume. That and a
long-term angle on the history futures market. I need your help,” he
babbles. “It won’t work without family, and I’m trying to stop her
killing herself -”
“Family.” She nods, guardedly, and Sirhan notices her companion, this
Pierre - not the weak link that broke back before he was born, but a
tough-eyed explorer newly returned from the wilderness - sizing him
up. Sirhan’s got one or two tricks up his exocortex, and he can see
the haze of ghost-shapes around Pierre; his data-mining technique is
crude and out-of-date, but enthusiastic and not without a certain
flair. “Family,” Amber repeats, and it’s like a curse. Louder: “Hello,
Mom. Should have guessed he’d have invited you here, too.”
“Guess again.” Sirhan glances round at Pamela, then back at Amber,
suddenly feeling very much like a rat trapped between a pair of angry
cobras. Leaning on her cane, wearing discreet cosmetics and with her
medical supports concealed beneath an old-fashioned dress, Pamela
could be a badly preserved sixtysomething from the old days instead of
the ghastly slow suicide case that her condition amounts to today. She
smiles politely at Amber. “You may remember me telling you that a lady
never unintentionally causes offense. I didn’t want to offend Sirhan
by turning up in spite of his wishes, so I didn’t give him a chance to
say no.”
“And this is supposed to earn you a sympathy fuck?” Amber drawls. “I’d
expected better of you.”
“Why, you -” The fire in her eyes dies suddenly, subjected to the
freezing pressure of a control that only comes with age. “I’d hoped
getting away from it all would have improved your disposition, if not
your manners, but evidently not.” Pamela jabs her cane at the table:
“Let me repeat, this is your son’s idea. Why don’t you eat something?”
“Poison tester goes first.” Amber smiles slyly.
“For fuck’s sake!” It’s the first thing Pierre has said so far, and
crude or not, it comes as a profound relief when he steps forward,
picks up a plate of water biscuits loaded with salmon caviar, and puts
one in his mouth. “Can’t you guys leave the back stabbing until the
rest of us have filled our stomachs? ‘S not as if I can turn down the
biophysics model in here.” He shoves the plate at Sirhan. “Go on, it’s
yours.”
The spell is broken. “Thank you,” Sirhan says gravely, taking a
cracker and feeling the tension fall as Amber and her mother stop
preparing to nuke each other and focus on the issue at hand - which is
that food comes before fighting at any social event, not vice versa.
“You might enjoy the egg mayonnaise, too,” Sirhan hears himself
saying: “It goes a long way to explaining why the dodo became extinct
first time around.”
“Dodoes.” Amber keeps one eye warily on her mother as she accepts a
plate from a silently gliding silver bush-shaped waitron. “What was
that about the family investment project?” she asks.
“Just that without your cooperation your family will likely go the way
of the bird,” her mother cuts in before Sirhan can muster a reply.
“Not that I expect you to care.”
Boris butts in. “Core worlds are teeming with corporates. Is bad
business for us, good business for them. If you are seeing what we are
seen -”
“Don’t remember you being there,” Pierre says grumpily.
“In any event,” Sirhan says smoothly, “the core isn’t healthy for us
one-time fleshbodies anymore. There are still lots of people there,
but the ones who uploaded expecting a boom economy were sadly
disappointed. Originality is at a premium, and the human neural
architecture isn’t optimized for it - we are, by disposition, a
conservative species, because in a static ecosystem, that provides the
best return on sunk reproductive investment costs. Yes, we change over
time - we’re more flexible than almost any other animal species to
arise on Earth - but we’re like granite statues compared to organisms
adapted to life under Economics 2.0.”
“You tell ‘em, boy,” Pamela chirps, almost mockingly. “It wasn’t that
bloodless when I lived through it.” Amber casts her a cool stare.
“Where was I?” Sirhan snaps his fingers, and a glass of fizzy grape
juice appears between them. “Early upload entrepreneurs forked
repeatedly, discovered they could scale linearly to occupy processor
capacity proportional to the mass of computronium available, and that
computationally trivial tasks became tractable. They could also run
faster, or slower, than real time. But they were still human, and
unable to operate effectively outside human constraints. Take a human
being and bolt on extensions that let them take full advantage of
Economics 2.0, and you essentially break their narrative chain of
consciousness, replacing it with a journal file of bid/request
transactions between various agents; it’s incredibly efficient and
flexible, but it isn’t a conscious human being in any recognizable
sense of the word.”
“All right,” Pierre says slowly. “I think we’ve seen something like
that ourselves. At the router.”
Sirhan nods, not sure whether he’s referring to anything important.
“So you see, there are limits to human progress - but not to progress
itself! The uploads found their labor to be a permanently deflating
commodity once they hit their point of diminishing utility. Capitalism
doesn’t have a lot to say about workers whose skills are obsolete,
other than that they should invest wisely while they’re earning and
maybe retrain: but just knowing how to invest in Economics 2.0 is
beyond an unaugmented human. You can’t retrain as a seagull, can you,
and it’s quite as hard to retool for Economics 2.0. Earth is -” He
shudders.
“There’s a phrase I used to hear in the old days,” Pamela says calmly,
“ethnic cleansing. Do you know what that means, darling idiot
daughter? You take people who you define as being of little worth, and
first you herd them into a crowded ghetto with limited resources, then
you decide those resources aren’t worth spending on them, and bullets
are cheaper than bread. ‘Mind children’ the extropians called the
posthumans, but they were more like Vile Offspring. There was a lot of
that, during the fast sigmoid phase. Starving among plenty, compulsory
conversions, the very antithesis of everything your father said he
wanted …”
“I don’t believe it,” Amber says hotly. “That’s crazy! We can’t go the
way of -”
“Since when has human history been anything else?” asks the woman with
the camera on her shoulder - Donna, being some sort of public
archivist, is in Sirhan’s estimate likely to be of use to him.
“Remember what we found in the DMZ?”
“The DMZ?” Sirhan asks, momentarily confused.
“After we went through the router,” Pierre says grimly. “You tell him,
love.” He looks at Amber.
Sirhan, watching him, feels it fall into place at that moment, a sense
that he’s stepped into an alternate universe, one where the woman who
might have been his mother isn’t, where black is white, his kindly
grandmother is the wicked witch of the west, and his feckless
grandfather is a farsighted visionary.
“We uploaded via the router,” Amber says, and looks confused for a
moment. “There’s a network on the other side of it. We were told it
was FTL, instantaneous, but I’m not so sure now. I think it’s
something more complicated, like a lightspeed network, parts of which
are threaded through wormholes that make it look FTL from our
perspective. Anyway, Matrioshka brains, the end product of a
technological singularity - they’re bandwidth-limited. Sooner or later
the posthuman descendants evolve Economics 2.0, or 3.0, or something
else and it, uh, eats the original conscious instigators. Or uses them
as currency or something. The end result we found is a howling
wilderness of degenerate data, fractally compressed, postconscious
processes running slower and slower as they trade storage space for
processing power. We were” - she licks her lips - “lucky to escape
with our minds. We only did it because of a friend. It’s like the main
sequence in stellar evolution; once a G-type star starts burning
helium and expands into a red giant, it’s ‘game over’ for life in what
used to be its liquid-water zone. Conscious civilizations sooner or
later convert all their available mass into computronium, powered by
solar output. They don’t go interstellar because they want to stay
near the core where the bandwidth is high and latency is low, and
sooner or later, competition for resources hatches a new level of
metacompetition that obsoletes them.”
“That sounds plausible,” Sirhan says slowly. He puts his glass down
and chews distractedly on one knuckle. “I thought it was a
low-probability outcome, but …”
“I’ve been saying all along, your grandfather’s ideas would backfire
in the end,” Pamela says pointedly.
“But -” Amber shakes her head. “There’s more to it than that, isn’t
there?”
“Probably,” Sirhan says, then shuts up.
“So are you going to tell us?” asks Pierre, looking annoyed. “What’s
the big idea, here?”
“An archive store,” Sirhan says, deciding that this is the right time
for his pitch. “At the lowest level, you can store backups of
yourself here. So far so good, eh? But there’s a bit more to it than
that. I’m planning to offer a bunch of embedded universes - big,
running faster than realtime - sized and scoped to let
human-equivalent intelligences do what-if modeling on themselves. Like
forking off ghosts of yourself, but much more so - give them whole
years to diverge, learn new skills, and evaluate them against market
requirements, before deciding which version of you is most suited to
run in the real world. I mentioned the retraining paradox. Think of
this as a solution for level
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