that deliver identical outputs from a simulation of the nerve. Repeat for entire brain, until youâve got a working map of it in your simulator. That right?â
â Da . Is-am assimilate expert systemâuse for self-awareness and contact with net at largeâthen hack into Moscow Windows NT User Group website. Am wanting to defect. Must repeat? Okay?â
Manfred winces. He feels sorry for the lobsters, the same way he feels for every wild-eyed hairy guy on a street corner yelling that Jesus is born again and must be fifteen, only six years to go before heâs recruiting apostles on AOL. Awakening to consciousness in a human-dominated Internet, that must be terribly confusing! There are no points of reference in their ancestry, no biblical certainties in the new millennium that, stretching ahead, promises as much change as has happened since their Precambrian origin. All they have is a tenuous metacortex of expert systems and an abiding sense of being profoundly out of their depth. (That, and the Moscow Windows NT User Group websiteâCommunist Russia is the only government still running on Microsoft, the central planning apparat being convinced that, if you have to pay for software, it must be worth something.)
The lobsters are not the sleek, strongly superhuman intelligences of pre-singularity mythology: Theyâre a dim-witted collective of huddling crustaceans. Before their discarnation, before they were uploaded one neuron at a time and injected into cyberspace, they swallowed their food whole, then chewed it in a chitin-lined stomach. This is lousy preparation for dealing with a world full of future-shocked talking anthropoids, a world where you are perpetually assailed by self-modifying spamlets that infiltrate past your firewall and emit a blizzard of cat-food animations starring various alluringly edible small animals. Itâs confusing enough to the cats the adverts are aimed at, never mind a crusty thatâs unclear on the idea of dry land. (Although the concept of a can opener is intuitively obvious to an uploaded Panulirus .)
âCan you help us?â ask the lobsters.
âLet me think about it,â says Manfred. He closes the dialogue window, opens his eyes again, and shakes his head. Someday he, too, is going to be a lobster, swimming around and waving his pincers in a cyberspace so confusingly elaborate that his uploaded identity is cryptozoic: a living fossil from the depths of geological time, when mass was dumb and space was unstructured. He has to help them, he realizesâthe GoldenRule demands it, and as a player in the agalmic economy, he thrives or fails by the Golden Rule.
But what can he do?
Early afternoon.
Lying on a bench seat staring up at bridges, heâs got it together enough to file for a couple of new patents, write a diary rant, and digestify chunks of the permanent floating slashdot party for his public site. Fragments of his weblog go to a private subscriber listâthe people, corporates, collectives, and bots he currently favors. He slides round a bewildering series of canals by boat, then lets his GPS steer him back toward the red-light district. Thereâs a shop here that dings a ten on Pamelaâs taste scoreboard: He hopes it wonât be seen as presumptuous if he buys her a gift. (Buys, with real moneyânot that money is a problem these days, he uses so little of it.)
As it happens DeMask wonât let him spend any cash; his handshake is good for a redeemed favor, expert testimony in some free speech versus pornography lawsuit years ago and continents away. So he walks away with a discreetly wrapped package that is just about legal to import into Massachusetts as long as she claims with a straight face that itâs incontinence underwear for her great-aunt. As he walks, his lunchtime patents boomerang: Two of them are keepers, and he files immediately and passes title to the Free Infrastructure Foundation. Two more