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Week #8 Response/Week #8 Response

QianXing’s Weekly Response #8

Posted by QianXing Ou on

After watching the episode San Junipero and The entire history of you, I felt very nervous and uncomfortable. In these episodes, the technology seems like a disaster to me. For San Junipero, it is saying that we are capable of programming ourselves inside an imaginary world, where we can live forever. It sounds like a really good idea. However, as we know, every program has a limited memory, if everyone chooses to go to that imaginary world, that world will be overpopulated soon.  Also, what if people use that as a kind of weapon? Some people might “store” people they don’t like inside the world, that basically “kills” that person indirectly. Since if you are inside the program, you do not have conscious in the real world. On the other hand, San Junipero does portray a good relationship, even though I do not like the technology inside it. At the end, Kelly chooses to be pass over, so when she passes away, she can live with Yorkie afterlife. However, while in the story, Kelly states that she doesn’t want to be pass over, because she doesn’t want to live in a world without her daughter and her husband, but she still does it at the end. This makes me think that Kelly loves Yorkie a lot and Yorkie makes her know and accept that she loves women as well as men. It is a very good ending. Those two people finally accept themselves as a homosexual person and live as a homosexual person. I feel proud about them.

For the entire history of you, I have actually no positive feelings towards it (it’s a good episode don’t get me wrong) I can’t really accept the story or the technology inside it. I just can’t imagine a world where people can rewind their memories and store them permanently. While it might be a good thing for test takers or someone who is bad at memories, it is awful. People’s brain is designed in a way, so we can forget things- usually those unhappy events.  However, this technology stores every details, which means you can’t really get over when a really bad things happen on you. Just like in the story, Liam keeps thinking about his wife is having an affair with another man and he keeps focusing on that to a point that it is affecting his life or almost makes him a criminal because he threatens Jonas to delete his memory with Ffion. However, I do feel lucky for Liam that at the end he finally finds out the relationship between Ffion and Jonas, otherwise Ffion and Jonas might keep doing their things in the future. I feel both Ffion and Jonas are piece of garbage since they know doing so will destroy a family, they still do it. Poor Liam. Overall, I do not like this technology. It makes possible that people can read your memories at anytime. This is terrible, since we want to keep some of our memories as secret.  

Technology is a good way to boost the communication of people. Both technology in both episodes boost the relationship.  Because of the program, dead people or elderly people can communicate with each other. Because of the permanent memory, people are likely to have more topic to talk about while they are on a party since they can just recall their memory.  However, too much of that might cause troubles. Liam became crazy because of that program because he paid too much attention on everything and people in San Junipero basically is having sex with each other, they don’t really have a good relationship with each other.

Week #7 Response/Week #7 Response

Reem’s Weekly Response #7

Posted by Reem Malek on

I got a look at what life would look like if individuals were held to a rating framework. Individuals frequently run over via web-based networking media as though everything is perfect in their life and you regularly don’t see the genuine them. I trust internet based life likewise prompts less important in personal connections in an individual’s life. Personally I have had actual encounters with “friends” who are always posting up on how great of a life they have and how they are always happy, and going out to new places. However they are actually the complete opposite if you were to see them in person. They are sad deep down and feel this emptiness that they try to fill this void with making people believe that they are “perfect”. Social media is a scary place and I would not want to live a life trying to please everyone around me and never being genuinely happy. In Nosedive individuals are giving a rating somewhere in the range of 1 and 5 dependent on your appearance as well as communications. This clearly makes a few people need to live as they do via web-based networking media, so they seem to be great and get 5-star evaluations. Individuals with scores more than 4 are viewed positively and are even qualified for advantages that others aren’t. I was anxious while watching this episode and figured something like this could be conceivable later on. Individuals are progressively getting to be fixated on games and social media frameworks that they can see satisfying feedback  from. On the off chance, everything else is held to a rating why not people? The main issue is who might speak to themselves honestly. Everybody would act counterfeit day in and day out and uneasiness and dejection would almost certainly be through the roof. It was particularly intriguing when the primary character saw what her life could look like if her rating was sufficiently high and she had the capacity to get the condo she needed. It completely assumed control over her life and she wound up fixated on hitting the 5 star point.

Week #7 Response/Week #7 Response

Geetangalie’s Week #7 Response

Posted by Geetangalie Goberdan on

In the Black Mirror episode entitled Nosedive we learn of an alternate society where individuals are rated off of every encounter they have with one another. People are allowed to rate you up to five stars and each rating contributes to your overall score. This, in turn, contributes to how people treat you, as higher rated individuals are prioritized and reap more benefits. In this episode, Lacie Pound is a people pleaser who has made her life revolved around trying to achieve a high rating. Currently, her eagerness to increase her rate is higher than usual because she has to move and the place she wants requires a rating above 4.5 for a 20% discount. She finds an opportunity where she can increase her score fast, by attending an old friend’s wedding where the guest list is filled with high ranking individuals. In the end, through many tribulations, her score ends up being lower than it’s ever been and she realizes the unimportance of the ranking system.

Watching this episode related so much to today’s society, where everyone does what they think will get the most likes or friends. The common saying “Do it for the gram,” exhibits how people will make careless decisions just to get a laugh from others. People’s perception of you has become more important to society than your own personal happiness. I even fall into this category as online I tend to be more careful with what I post, in fear of others judging me. Whether it be making sure I post pictures that are “Instagram worthy” or that do not show my imperfections. Watching this episode was in a way sad and made me feel empathy for the people who feel as though they need to liked by everyone in order to be happy with their self.

Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Reem’s Weekly response #5

Posted by Reem Malek on

Ex Machina was acceptably a great movie, I started the movie with no intentions of enjoying it to be completely honest. However i grew fond of it and enjoyed the suspense. The point of accomplishing the ideal method to make computerized reasoning, an AI, is one that numerous individuals wish to accomplish and one that society is envisioning. Robots a6re delivered to bring advantageous for our day by day life. In the film, “Ex Machina”, the robot Ava manipulated Caleb and gained his trust to help escape from the lab, and murdered Nathan. This film works to perfection of offering conversation starters about the eventual fate of mankind and whether we will almost certainly control AI that may take over in the event that we are not cautious. It’s interesting to see the robot Ava imagines she is impassive all through the film and her capacity to utilize feelings and sentiments to control people is outstanding.After viewing the film, I don’t generally stress over the fate of AI, robots will possibly have feelings if the person who made it planned to give them so, also human feelings are difficult to impersonate. The facts demonstrate that robots can be hurtful to us, because of its mistakes in the making of it. But at the same time it’s consistent with some other advances, similar to cars, cell phones and earphones. Occasionally, we hear the news of a telephone blowing up because of its low quality, and it’s much the same as AI, they could be destructive to us. Consequently, the most critical thing is the quality control, we can avoid this occurrence later on. The setting played so well into the idea that Nathan genuinely was a crazy lab rat who separated himself from all of society due to the extent of what he was trying to achieve. I preferred how the story was pieced into sessions each assuming an essential job in the development of the film. this film felt very genuine when Nathan started to disclose how he figured out how to plan Ava so well.

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#week8

Posted by Afeez Alli on

#Week8

Black Mirror – Season 3 Ep: 6- San Junipiero; & Season 1 Ep: 3 – The Entire History of You

My time watching these two episodes was actually done in my recreational time a few weeks ago. I actually until now have not had the opportunity to discuss the concepts these episodes touched upon. Especially how it was creatively done; employing the possibilities of “cutting Edge” technology into a ambiguously timeless society. Facilitated obviously by the piece of technology in question by each particular episode. 

San Junipiero struck me as what it was, Dante’s Paradiso. It was seemingly beautiful. Obviously to the program that experienced the “paradise” as a result or consequence of a ful/un-fulfilled life. The characters in San Junipiero got to enjoy the “present” that the paradise offered. And…could choose to stay forever in digital bliss. However, as the story’s taciturn introduced the dilemma of leaving one’s physical body behind the choice of what was experienced already was made easier. I would stay in paradiso. If I were the one who had experienced my own experiences up until the point of the character in the hospital bed. The image of a ful-filled life versus the co-stat’s life who’s testimony to the richness of her life was her own character.

“The Entire History of You” was simply a test of the human reaction to nature around him. Man wants to control nature. I think that if given the opportunity to control my memories it’s databank the way I deemed operationally necessary to continue a healthy life. However, that sort of power in conjunction with another individual in the face of a society continuously plagued by “corruption,” maintaining a healthy trusting relationship could result in the outcome of ep.

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#Week7

Posted by Afeez Alli on

#Week7

Black Mirror – Season 3 Ep: 1 – Nosedive 

Nosedive was one of my favorite episodes. It fairly depicted what social media could possibly already be doing to society’s temperament of it’s individuals. It was heightened and made more scary by denoting it’s data as the core for all other goverment technology. Everything a person did was denoted by their rating of every interaction. However, the introduction of her co-worker looking to get good ratings by offering coffee to the whole office but she falling for the bait as she was “late to the party” was awesome! It captured the essence of the weakest link. A phrase used to describe a component of a team that has been quantified and it’s capacity recorded by some experience or happenstance. However, with technology and these ratings, the temperament of being a “weak link” in a team get’s stressed by the concept of ratings that one has to work to the decimal point to better. Forget worrying about a GPA, your life is rated and freaking out about that in my opinion based on this episode is down right necessary. The ending where she crashes her best friends wedding is where I established my ultimate connection with this episode. I know the synopsis of the story is kind of the detail but the subtle elephant in the room is directed and conveyed so well that I had to ask myself where I stood amongst my buddies in a wedding setting. Not just any wedding setting. The wedding of whom I consider to care for me as a friend as I care enough to proclaim to the whole world that I consider that person a solid control in my program. Social media as a sensor for such a deep concept is a dangerous facilitator when it comes from such a adolescent generation. It’s almost like asking a robot to give a patient bad news because it’s mechanical cousin “life-support machine” has been keeping Johnny alive so long. Why not?!

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