The virtual world is being built: refining the Matrix

The virtual society is being built: refining the Matrix

by Jon Rappoport

January 14, 2014

www.nomorefakenews.com

Research on simulating the human brain is marching forward. Corporations are attempting to build devices that talk to their users in a “realistic” fashion.

These computers would continuously update profiles of their owners, seeking to read their emotional states and preferences and respond to them.

The old phrase, “the machine age,” takes on new meaning. Sellers are betting that consumers want machines that understand them. This bet has a corollary: human to human interaction is just too complicated and unpredictable.

Instead, machines can be programmed to reflect their users. Narcissism wins.

I’m your machine. I’m not here to criticize you or challenge you. I’m here to be like you and serve your needs. I’m here to talk to you in ways you understand and appreciate.”

This is a far cry from the robotic telephone operator who puts you on hold for 20 minutes. This is friendship. This is happiness.

There’s one major stumbling block. The emotional range of an alive and alert human is too wide, too subtle, and too varied to embed in a machine that is supposed to stand in as a friend and companion.

The response to that problem is: reduce the range of the human user.

This campaign has been underway for some time. Watch movies, watch television shows and video games, listen to popular music, listen to politicians. It’s all about reduction. Simplification. Lowest common denominators.

Observe the slogans of social movements. If you have the stomach for it, go into a public school and watch what teachers are doing to your children.

Check out New Age-type spiritual movements. Notice how they tend to sell oversimplified slogans and encourage focusing on empty generalizations.

You see, the individual is too complex for this new machine age. His range of feeling and thought must be diminished.

Eventually, he’ll interact with a sophisticated talking computer and feel right at home. He’ll believe his emotions are being mirrored and appreciated.

Reduction. Never proliferation.

If you’ve ever studied infomercials, you know the whole business is based on back-end sales. It’s not the product you buy for $19.95, it’s the products they can hook you into after you spend the $19.95.


So it is with Google Glass. It’s all about the apps that’ll be attached.

Glass gives the wearer short-hand reality as he taps in. That’s what it’s for. The user is “on the go.” If he’s driving his Lexus and suddenly thinks about Plato, he’s not going to download the full text of The Republic to mull while he’s crashing into big trucks on the Jersey Turnpike. He’s going to take a shorthand summary. A few lines.

People want boiled-down info while they’re on the move. Reduction. The “essentials.”

This is perfectly in line with the codes of the culture. Ads, quick-hitter seminars, headlines, two-sentence summaries, ratings for products, news with no context. Stripped-down.

Well, here is a look into right now. A student at Stanford is developing a Google app that “reads other people.”

From SFGate, 8/26, “Google Glass being designed to read emotions”: “The [emotion-recognition] tools can analyze facial expressions and vocal patterns for signs of specific emotions: Happiness, sadness, anger, frustration, and more.” (the SFGate article is also here with videos and images). (and on WIRED Magazine here).

This is the work of Catalin Voss (twitter), an 18-year-old student at Stanford and his start-up company, Sension.

“So you’re wearing Google Glass at a meeting and it checks out the guy across the table who has an empty expression on his mug and, above your right eye, you see the word ‘neutral.’ Now he smiles, and the word ‘happy’ appears.”

This information is supposed to guide you in your communication. The number of things that can go wrong? Count the ways, if you’re able. I’m personally looking forward to that guy across the table saying, “Hey, you, schmuck with the Glass, what is your app saying about me now? Angry?” That should certainly enhance the communication.

Or a husband, just back from his 12-mile morning bike ride, enters his Palo Alto home, wearing Glass, of course, and as he looks at his wife, who is sitting at the kitchen table reading a book, he sees the word “sad” appear above his eye. “Honey,” he says, recalling the skills he picked up in a 26-minute webinar, “have you been pursuing a negative line of thinking?”

She slowly gazes up at the goggle-eyed monster in his spandex and grasshopper helmet, rises from her chair and tosses a plate of hot eggs in his face. YouTube, please!

But wait. There’s more. The Glass app is also being heralded as a step forward in “machine-human relationships.” With recognition services like Google Now and Siri, when computers and human users talk to each other, the computers will be able to respond not only to the content of the user’s words, but also to his tone, his feelings.

This should be a real marvel. The emotion-recognition tool is all about reduction. It shrinks human feelings to simplistic labels. Therefore, what machines say back to humans will be something to behold.

Machine version of NLP, anyone?

The astonishing thing about this new app is that many tech people are so on-board with it. In other words, they believe that human feelings can be broken down and worked with on an androidal basis, with no loss incurred. These people are already boiled down, cartoonized.

You think you’ve observed predictive programing in movies? That’s nothing. The use of apps like this one will help bring about a greater willingness on the part of humans to reduce their own thoughts and feelings to…FIT THE SPECS OF THE MACHINES AND THE SOFTWARE.

Count on it.

This isn’t really about machines acting more like humans. It’s about humans acting like machines.

The potential range of human emotions is extraordinary. Our language, when used with imagination, actually extends that range. It’s something called art.


Exit From the Matrix


No matter how subtle the machines and their emotion-recognition algorithms become, there will always be a wide, wide gap between what they produce and the expression of humans.

The most profound kind of mind control seeks to eliminate that gap by encouraging us to mimic technology. That means people will think and feel less, and what they think and feel will mean less.

The machines won’t say, “I’m sorry, I can’t identify that emotion, it’s too complex.” They’ll say “sad” or “happy” or “upset” or whatever they have to say to give the appearance that they’re on top of the human condition.


The Matrix Revealed


Eventually, significant numbers of people will tailor their self-awareness to what the machines point to, name, label, declare.

Thus, inventing reality.

The wolf becomes a lamb, the lamb becomes a flea.

And peace prevails. You can wear it and see with it.

Eventually, realizing that Glass is too obvious and obnoxious and bulky, companies will develop something they might call Third Eye, a chip the size of half a grain of rice, made flat, and inserted under the skin of the forehead.

Perfect. Invisible. Of course, cops will have them. And talk to them.

I’m parked at the corner of Wilshire and Westwood. Suspicious male standing outside the Harmon Building.”

I see him. Searching relevant data.”

Which means any past arrests, race, conditions noted in his medical records, tax status, questionable statements he’s made in public or private, significant known associates, group affiliations, etc. And present state of mind.

The cop: “Recommendation?”

Passive-aggressive, right now he’s peaking at 3.2 on the Hoover Bipolar scale. Bring subject into custody for general questioning.”

Will do.”

No one will wonder why, because such analysis resonates with the vastly reduced general perception of what reality is all about.

People mimic how machines see them and adjust their human thinking accordingly.

Hand and glove, key and lock. Wonderful.

As the cop is transporting the suspect to the station, Third Eye intercedes: “Sorry, Officer Crane, it took me a minute to dig further. Suspect is an important business associate of (REDACTED). This is a catch and release. Repeat, catch and release. Printing out four backstage passes to Third Memorial Rolling Stones concert at the Hollywood Bowl. Apologize profusely, give subject the tickets, and release him immediately.”

I copy.”

This arrest and attendant communication is being deleted…now.”


Here is another long-term trend that’s conspired to produce humans who want to interact with machines in a virtual world: child-entitlement.

Give a child what he wants when he wants it. Every time. Become a slave to your child’s immediate needs. (And when you’re exhausted from that routine, just set him up in front of the television set, where he can experience fast-cutting shows that entrain his brain to accept a shortened attention span. More reduction.)

It’s easy. And 30 years from now, a child won’t even want his parents, because his companion, friend, and guide, his personal machine, a little cube he carries around with him, will understand him so much better.

Good morning, Jimmy. It’s me again, your friend Oz. How are you feeling? Happy, sad? Let me do a quick scan. I see you’re a little sad…”

Jon Rappoport

The author of two explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED and EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free emails at www.nomorefakenews.com

16 comments on “The virtual world is being built: refining the Matrix

  1. Homer says:

    Welcome to Ziggy asbestos dusts techNOtronic error,
    brought to US by Synthetic Terror.
    All control files and snarky smiles.
    I’ll keep my poker face, my stoic expression,
    I won’t display my emotions for a high tech Hessian.
    I don’t need Google Glasses,
    to see they hate me,
    I don’t care if they label me,
    to try and negate me,
    AND… I don’t dare bite,
    as they try to bait me.
    You wouldn’t hit a man with Google Glasses Would You?

  2. Now says:

    It’s all about trust.
    YOU want Trust
    Stop Torture(meaning physical torture. Meaning STOP that Electronic switch.
    Stop forcibly extracting brain dumps.
    SEE what happens.
    Then we will talk about TOUCH.
    If Torture ever returns trust will never return!
    Questions?
    Ask.

  3. Now says:

    No torture!
    Is that too much to ask?
    Is that fined tuned enough?

  4. Blade says:

    I would add that Sheeple want simplified homogenized crap, the uniquely aware individual wants no part of it!

    • SamAdamsGhost says:

      Great art – – – a painting, music, literature, etc has depth to it. There’s a reason people say “The movie wasn’t nearly as good as the book.” A relatively short minutes long or a couple hours long video presentation can’t compete with the range of emotions expressed in great literature or the reader’s own imagination. Unfortunately, people are mimicking what they see on t.v. and in the movies and hear in popular ‘music’. So, they become flatter, limited human beings with a narrow range of thinking and feeling.

  5. OzzieThinker says:

    Some have already activated their third eye. The symbol of Ra provides a nice map (for those with intelligence). This enables the user to scan anybody’s electro-magnetic field (the emotional level). Time and space don’t interfere. If Google had that power, they’d be dangerous.

  6. Gerry says:

    “No matter how subtle the machines and their emotion-recognition algorithms become, there will always be a wide, wide gap between what they produce and the expression of humans.”

    There is no reason to believe that.

  7. When the world around has no more surprises, is that what’s called The Matrix? In the first film, the machines realised that giving everyone “complete” happiness made them reject the programming. So even though the world is being simplified to a lowest common denominator, how will people even know what it was like last year when they can hardly remember yesterday.

  8. Michael says:

    It seems to me to be quite evident that we are all living in a toxic dystopian future. The entire electronic tech has run its course and the human race is at dead end Street…no more computer tech progression from here…we have atrophied into a globular quasi-human. With no more new electronic frontiers to conquer. We are limited we find by the physics of the galaxy. It is now realized there is a reason why there are such vast distances between stars.
    We have embraced the machine future totally and are plugged in at birth until death. A virtual world is created for us, piped directly into the brains of a Soma induced sleeping human.
    We travel backwards in time, not actually, but through predictive virtual programs to explore a tactile sensory world that is lost to the future. Sort like the online game ‘Second Life’ on steroids, with a chaser of LSD.
    The problem is some of us have woke up to how we arrived at this future! And rudely enough are trying to wake the rest of the herd, in an attempt to stop it from happening. The problem is that no one wants it stop it from happening, they like their iWorld.
    And so the few awakened find that the only way out of the nightmare is to use our own imagination. And dig in for the long haul.
    Michael

    “And because I am happy, & dance & sing
    They think they have done me no injury.
    And are gone to praise God & his Priest & King.
    Who make up a heaven of our misery.”- William Blake

    • OzzieThinker says:

      You are perceptive man, Michael. This is the message from the latest Zeta crop circle (thanks Nvidia for “admitting” to faking (sic) it; you were part of the Zeta plan). They also talk about masonic police force HQ’d in London.

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