Take Me To Your Net
Transcript of Take Me To Your Net
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Take Me To Your NetBy Dan Comstock
FIRST DRAFT 3/18/13
Okay kid, slow down. No, thats a misconception. When were you born? 2022?Jesus, you are making me feel like an old man. I was born pre-2000 but Im not telling
you when. When I was a kid we could only access the net using a landline. Thats a typeof phone line. Okay. Dont they teach you this stuff in school? Oh I gotcha, they fill your
head with all that Bio/Info symbiosis stuff but dont teach your history. Alright, let metell you how it all unfolded. Did anybody ever tell you the story about the aliens? I know
you grew up with them here, youve read about it in textbooks. But have you ever talkedto somebody that remembers it first hand? Okay, listen, this is important.
Obviously, the aliens took us off-guard. We had always expected that if humanity
came into contact with alien life, they would arrive on our planet in a flying saucer orsomething. Then a humanoid would get out of the saucer, flash a peace sign, and sayTake me to your leader. Hell of an assumption - that aliens would basically have tribes
and leaders just like we do. We were projecting ourselves into the unknown.Basically, the first signs of alien contact were that the Internet got all wonky. It all
started on a Monday in September. All the kids had just gone back to school. There wasabout an hour of interference on wi-fi networks all across the globe. Nobody could get a
good signal. The scientists told us it was a solar flare, some kind of radiation from the sunmessing up our networks. It was a pretty good guess but dead wrong.
For the next few months, the interference kept up. But not for everybody. It wouldappear on certain networks for a few minutes, then vanish. This kept happening all over
the globe. At any given moment, at least one network would be affected. Nobody had agood explanation.
Eventually, some researcher came up with a name for it, Anomalous SignalInterference. After that, it didnt seem so mysterious. Whats happening to the network?
Oh, its just ASI. Its crazy, right? Something fantastic can become boring so easily. Assoon as an unknown becomes a known quantity, it fades into our peripheral vision.
Wikipedias entry about ASI was repeatedly vandalized. Somebody kept addingan explanation about aliens from outer space testing the worlds computer networks.
Nobody really paid attention to that, but the conspiracy theory blogs ate it up. Whoeverwas making the edits was really fast about it. Somebody would fix the entry and it would
get rolled back immediately. The moderators tried to protect the page from edits, butnothing they did seemed to stick.
Who was making these edits? According to the logs, the edits were always madeby an anonymous user. Eventually, somebody figured out that these edits always came
from a network which was currently experiencing ASI.The conspiracy theory bloggers were actually the first to figure out what was
going on. At the time, that seemed even less likely than alien contact. I mean, are youfamiliar with the conspiracy theory layer of the Internet? These people are always
searching for something to flip out about. They used to say the moon landing was a hoax.
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Crazy stuff like that. This group of tinfoil hat wearing whack-jobs said that the peopleediting Wikipedia were aliens. Everybody laughed at them. That just made the nutjobs
band together. They formed a group to discuss the aliens and try to make contact.In December, the group claimed they had met the aliens. Like, really made
contact. They had photographs. Said the aliens showed up at one of their meetings to
shake hands. And the photographs werent blurry or misleading. They depicted a bunchof very strange looking people hanging out with some other very strange looking people.The next few months were kind of predictable. The conspiracy theorists were
dismissed and mocked in the media. Then theyd post more evidence. Then the evidencewas torn to shreds by various experts on the Internet and evening talk shows. And by
the time we realized we had actually made contact with alien life, everybody was alreadysick of hearing about it.
To summarize: first contact with an alien species was a bit of a letdown.It happened right under our noses and we never noticed it. It didnt sound like
anything we expected. For one, if we sent a space shuttle to an alien planet, the people onthat shuttle would be the best humanity has to offer. Bright, beautiful people with
expensive degrees. But that wasnt the case with the aliens. The aliens that came to visitEarth werent sexy -- they were just regular schlubs like you and me.
They looked a lot like humans. They had two legs, two arms, two eyes, and amouth. Walked upright. Wore pants and shirts. A few even had facial hair. If you saw one
from behind, you might think you were just looking at a dude with a terrible haircut.From the front, they looked like some kind of plastic surgery accident.
Surprisingly, they spoke English. To us, at least. They talked funny, though. Theypronounced words like a deaf person does. Like when youve read a word but have never
heard it spoken out loud, so you end up mispronouncing it without even knowing it.The most disappointing thing, however, was that the aliens werent terribly
interested in us. They regarded us with cold detachment and forced candor, sort of likewhen a store clerk asks if you need help finding anything and you tell him Just
browsing.To somebody that grew up before the year 2000, that is probably the weirdest
part. It was just very mundane. It didnt used to be like this, you know? If scientists cureda disease or put a man on another planet, everybody would be chattering about it for
weeks. In the 2010s, we started getting blasted by extremely exciting and depressingnews at the same time, every moment of every day. And to cope with it, we all learned to
tune it out. When AIDS was cured, it was just one headline in a long list of othershocking headlines. When the world is changing so quickly every day, you get kind of
numb to it.So there were aliens. Everybody knew it but nobody cared. Youd see them at the
library, staring listlessly at a computer, one finger on the mouse wheel. Youd see themgetting on the bus, looking at a handheld device, bumping into people by accident. If you
talked to somebody about the aliens, there was a 50/50 chance theyd just roll their eyesat you and brush you off.
This talk show host, Adam Mach, invited one of the aliens onto his show. I dontknow how he picked this one, it wasnt like they had leaders or anything, I guess he just
went down to some bus stop and asked a random alien if he would mind beinginterviewed.
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So this alien, named Curd, looked kind of like Michael Jackson after his surgerystarted to come apart. Whos Michael Jackson? Give me a break kid, youre killing me.
He was our cultures Frankenstein monster for a little while. Just do an image search andbrace yourself.
Curd slouched in his seat, constantly sipped his mug of water, and seemed
distracted. He kept looking right at the cameras or the studio audience. Adam Mach askedhim, more or less, what his people were doing here on earth. I remember watching this onthe web, nodding along with that question. I had just assumed somebody had asked them
that already.Curd explained that he was part of a tech team which was helping life on their
planet make contact with life on other planets. Adam Mach asked Curd how he liked thelife on our planet. Curd shrugged, said it was okay. There was this awkward moment of
silence - you could tell Mach expected Curd to elaborate, but he didnt.So, asked Mach, Whats life like on your planet?
Curd sat up a little, wiping his weird flat nose with the back of his hand. Well,he said, Its a lot bigger and faster than life here. But its also a lot older.
What do you mean? asked the talk show host.Life on our planet has been around for Lets see Curd squinted as he did
some math in his head, About 400 earth years.But Curd, said Adam Mach, raising an eyebrow, Life on our planet is hundreds
of millions of years old.Oh, said Curd, Thats not what I mean. Youre just talking about biological
matter, Im talking about life.You dont consider biological matter to be living?
Eh, I guess its technically alive, said Curd, shrugging.What do you consider life, then? asked Adam Mach.
We look at it this way. Biological matter, he said, pointing at himself and thehost, is the carrier mechanism for life. The hardware, basically. Life is the software.
Adam Mach paused, he was very confused. So you dont think youre alive,Curd?
The software is the living part, said Curd, The body isnt the person, the mindis. A body with no mind isnt a person. But a mind without a body can still be alive.
Around here, said Curd, You guys think of life in these very physical terms.Its based on cells. It takes physical fuel, it excretes physical waste. But look at it this
way so do cars, and do you think cars are alive? When we first came here, we assumedthe cars were organisms and you were just their organs. But it turns out theyre just
machines you built to carry you around. And thats what your bodies are to your DNA.Our planet, continued Curd, isnt very different from yours. A long time ago,
natural forces brewed up some amino acids. These acids had chemical properties whichpulled other amino acids into a similar pattern. The more robust configurations of acids
were able to do this very frequently, spawning multiple copies of themselves. They arentperfect copies, some of them lasted longer and reproduced, some of them fell apart
immediately. This process continued for hundreds of millions of years. Each generationhas a few copies that are better adapted for reproduction than their peers. And in this way,
these configurations of amino acids change over time. They become more complex,better protected. They are trying to become immortal.
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Mmhmm, said Adam Mach, nodding, youre talking about natural selection.Yes, said Curd, The way we see it, over time, these amino acids invented robot
bodies -- which you call cells. The acids live in a city of cells which you think of as anindividual. The individual is just the citys consensus.
So you dont consider yourself a single organism, said Adam Mach, You think
of yourself as a city of life forms.Curd shook his head, No no, the amino acids arent really alive either. Theyrebasically just a set of instructions about how to make copies of themselves.
The alien leaned forward, looking right into the camera, Consider this sentence:
Repeat this sentence to everybody. The alien paused, taking a sip from the mug of
water.If I ask nicely, maybe youll do it. If I throw a threat onto the end, you may be
even more likely to spread it. Maybe Ill tell you that if you dontrepeat it to everybody,youll spend an eternity in torment, and if you do repeat it, youll get an eternity of
rewards. The copy of the sentence that is most persuasive and imperative will be the mostlikely to reproduce. Maybe even for hundreds of millions of years, growing more
complex and self-sustainable over time.Microphone in hand, Mach turned towards his audience, Repeat this sentence to
everybody, he said with a wink.Curd continued, Information, more or less, is just an accessory to amino acids
chemical disposition to make copies of itself. Sensation, language, the ability tounderstand the world, sexual reproduction and the emotions associated with it -- it is all
just a way for amino acid to preserve the protective shell around it and ensure copies of itpersist in the world.
So what do you consider life, then? asked Mach.Well eventually, through the long and torturous process of natural selection,
information becomes an agent independent of the amino acids. Its very similar to howrandom combinations of amino acids will eventually produce copies of themselves.
Information has properties which pulls other information into a similar pattern. It grows,mutates, and spawns copies of itself.
I dont understand, said Mach, How does information do things?Look at it this way, said Curd, The wordpsychology: it represents a collection
of ideas about how your minds operate. But psychology, as a body of information, isincomplete, it doesnt perfectly model how the mind works the model grows and
changes over time, adapts itself to its environment. It uses you to grow and perpetuateitself.
Adam Mach looked puzzled. How does information use us? Isnt it the other wayaround we use information?
Information has a symbiotic relationship with the amino acids, continued Curd,In the city called psychology, information which does a good job of explaining the mind
will advance a scientists career. A scientist will pass on that information because itmakes his amino acids more likely to reproduce. Other scientists, hoping to reap the same
benefit, will copy the information in the form of references and citations. They will buildon it. If the information is well adapted to this particular landscape of sexual
reproduction, it will eventually be replicated in blogs and conversations by nonscientists.In this way, it may become permanent, immortal.
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Curd yawned. Thats how a body of information acts on the world. It has a lifeand a drive for survival independent of amino acids. Psychology wants to grow and
become immortal, and it does this by better modeling the mind. Complex informationsystems become agents in of themselves. They game the self-preserving properties of
amino acids to perpetuate their existence. As I explain this to you, I am acting as an agent
of those information systems.Adam Mach blinked a few times. So your people youre here on earth to helpyour information systems reproduce?
Curd nodded, Our information systems all moved into a city together, itsbasically the same as your Internet. Weve found lots of planets with biological matter on
them, but this is the first planet weve found hosting other advanced life.Let me get this straight, said Adam Mach, leaning in, You are not interested in
humans. Your Internet wants to meet our Internet.Yes, said Curd, And reproduce with it.
Mach blinked again.Eventually, the talk show host found the words, Hows that going?
Frankly, the alien said with a note of disappointment, you dont seem to bethat into us. You seem distracted.
What should we do differently? asked Adam Mach.Weve been discussing it, said the alien, and we think we are paying too much
attention to your information systems, not enough to the biological matter. As weunderstand it, we must provide a reproductive benefit to your biological matter before
your Internet will notice ours. Our physical appearance doesnt enter into your plans forreproduction. Thats probably why your information systems havent noticed that our
information systems are flirting with them. So were going to leave.Youre leaving Earth? asked the talk show host, shocked.
Yes. We are going to reconfigure our efforts. We need to clean up and try adifferent approach.
What do you mean? asked Mach.We have to get sexier, said Curd with a shrug. Itll take a few centuries to
reconfigure our biological matter. But we will return in a form that will make yourbiological matter assume we are good candidates for sexual intercourse. And then your
information systems will pay attention to us.
The aliens didnt stick around much longer than that. After a few weeks, theywere all gone, just another headline from last weeks news.
When the aliens left, we realized we missed a great opportunity. Our race hasbeen jacking off into a sock for millions of years, and we blew our one shot to get laid.
And that, kid, is why there are so many sexy aliens in the media these days. Were piningfor them. Because when the aliens return, theyre going to look like models and athletes
and bang the hell out of all of us. As a species, we are sitting by the phone, waiting forthem to call us back.
Right, sitting by the phone. Oh, back in the old days, you didnt carry phones withyou, you had to sit next to them. Jesus, its like I have to explain everything.
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I wonder, you know? Are they going to come back? Will they forever be the onesthat got away? Are we destined to sit here with our hands in our pockets, a blue ball
floating through space waiting for some other species to notice our Internet?I dont know, kid, I dont know. But every night, I look up at the stars, and I get
vaguely turned on. Maybe someday