Old Thinker News via infowars.com
Google is funding a secretive project that will use millions of linked computers to create an Avatar-like virtual reality world in which people could live, interact, and even have sex.
Google is funding a secretive project that will use millions of linked computers to create an Avatar-like virtual reality world in which people could live, interact, and even have sex.
The idea sounds like a rudimentary version of the 1999 science fiction thriller The Thirteenth Floor,
in which supercomputers create a simulated reality populated by human
characters who don’t know that they are living in an artificially
generated world.
Entitled High Fidelity,
the project envisions a virtual reality “world extending visibly to
vanishing points like our world does today, enabling you to see your
house, your neighborhood, distant mountains, and other planets in the
sky,” and will rely on “millions of people to contribute their devices
and share them to simulate the virtual world.”
Second Life founder Philip Rosedale, the program’s
architect, says the idea is to “create a virtual place with the kind of
richness and communication and interaction that we find in the real
world, and then get us all in there.” Rosedale boldly predicts that
within six years High Fidelity will allow people to immerse themselves
in virtual landscapes that resemble cutting edge CGI environments seen
in movies likeAvatar and Star Trek.
The slogan for the project states, “If it doesn’t hurt to think about it, we’re not going to try it.”
According to a report by
Singularity Hub’s Jason Dorrier, the project will utilize a second or
third generation version of Oculus Rift, the virtual reality headset, in
addition to an array of body sensing technology in order to create a
tactile environment with virtually instantaneous communication between
physical movement and the behavior of the individual’s avatar within the
virtual reality world.
“High Fidelity’s other big idea will power the world
they live in,” writes Dorrier. “In exchange for virtual money, virtual
citizens will assign their computer’s unused processing power—when
they’re sleeping, for example—to construct High Fidelity’s world in
exquisite detail.” The program could use anything up to a billion linked
computers to sculpture and maintain its artificial landscape.
It’s also envisaged that people will have relationships,
get married, and even enjoy virtual reality sex in this artificial
landscape, mirroring the predictions of futurist Ray Kurzweil, whose 1999 book The Age of Spiritual Machines features
a character called Molly who ditches her husband in favor of an
artificially intelligent computer with which she merges and then
electronically copulates.
This brings up an interesting moral conundrum – does
having sex with someone else’s avatar in virtual reality constitute
cheating?
The idea of creating intricate artificially generated environments brings us back to a mind-boggling question that we’ve asked before.
If in 2013 we’re now starting to talk about using
computers to create incredibly complex and sophisticated virtual reality
worlds in which humans interact with each other, how do we know that
our own world is not merely an even more high-tech virtual reality
simulation created by our future selves?
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