ALGORITHMIC CATHEDRAL
We no
longer live in a society, but in a dataset. We've gone from the Cartesian
"I think, therefore I am" to "I am profiled, therefore I
exist." Our social identity is merely the digital residue of an equation
written in Python that serves only to build an algorithmic cathedral.
Have you ever had the feeling that the comments under
a viral post are all... strangely similar? Or that Google search results have
become a labyrinth of articles written by a bot that has overindulged in
digital caffeine? Welcome to the heart of the algorithmic cathedral theory.
This theory suggests that most internet activity is no
longer the work of humans, but of a coordinated network of artificial
intelligences and bots. A cathedral of artificial thoughts and bots.
This cathedral has one purpose: To manipulate public
opinion through artificial consensus. To maximize advertising revenue by
inflating viewer metrics. To sell products through reviews and automatically
generated content.
We used
to say: "I think, therefore I am." Today we risk saying, 'Prompt,
ergo est': if the algorithm doesn't process it, we can't even conceive of it;
thought becomes synthetic.
Let's be clear: we're not yet in the twilight of human
thought. There are still billions of real people uploading photos of cats,
arguing over the recipe for carbonara, and creating wonderful memes.
However, only the man created by GOD possesses
emotional nuances that a bot will never possess.
QUARTAVEL
©

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