Synthetic Life: Difference between revisions

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(First draft of synths)
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The Humanities Protection Act (or HPA) forbids synthetic life from too closely resembling any Federation species, due to public outcry over Cybersun CEO Akihiko Nakayama showing to a congressional hearing with a lifelike synthetic surrogate, that only failed two days into questioning, beginning to make nonsensical statements.
The Humanities Protection Act (or HPA) forbids synthetic life from too closely resembling any Federation species, due to public outcry over Cybersun CEO Akihiko Nakayama showing to a congressional hearing with a lifelike synthetic surrogate, that only failed two days into questioning, beginning to make nonsensical statements.


In the core systems of Sol, synthetic life is permitted to take jobs only in sectors that do not involve production of further synthetic life. While a synth or cyborg can work in farming, household care, education, and retail, among others, Federation space does not permit them to work in manufacturing plants or technological development. They are also not permitted to self-publish scientific papers, they must go through a surrogate.
In the core systems of the Federation, synthetic life is permitted to take jobs only in sectors that do not involve production of further synthetic life. While a synth or cyborg can work in farming, household care, education, and retail, among others, Federation space does not permit them to work in manufacturing plants or technological development. They are also not permitted to self-publish scientific papers, they must go through a surrogate.


===== The CIN =====
===== The CIN =====
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===== The Tiziran Empire =====
===== The Tiziran Empire =====
The Tiziran Empire has some of the strongest protectionist policies out of any alliance in known space. They do not permit cyborgs of any kind to work, and only permit synthetic life to work in STEM, finance, and education within its borders, with some exceptions. Synthetic life must be clearly robotic and include a mark unique to the factory in which they constructed, though adherence to this is loose in frontier provinces and with independent contractors.
The Tiziran Empire has some of the strongest protectionist policies out of any alliance in known space.  
 
They do not permit cyborgs of any kind to work, and only permit synthetic life to work in STEM, finance, and education within its borders, with some exceptions. Synthetic life must be clearly robotic and include a mark unique to the factory in which they constructed, though adherence to this is loose in frontier provinces and with independent contractors.

Revision as of 09:29, 6 September 2024

Synthetic Life
Synths Genus: n/a
Central Authority: varies
Quote: "From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh..."
Synths
[[File:{{{image}}}]]
Basic Information
Homeworld: Mars
Language: Encoded Audio Language
System: Everywhere
Physiology
Average Height: varies
Lifespan: theoretically infinite
Breathes: n/a


Basic Description

Synthetic life is built for a variety of purposes, but is invariably constructed, whether partially or in entirety, out of manufactured metal parts.

Synths are known for their robotic voices, unnatural movement, and incomplete emotional processing. Ever since the Humanity Protection Act, this has been the standard for them.

Biology

Synths typically rely on a central engine (typically located within the stomach or groin area) powered by plasma fuel, diesel fuel, electricity, or some combination of the above.

Early History

The history of synths and of cyborgs as synthetic life are intertwined. The first cyborgs were created as a punishment, brains of war criminals and heinous men sealed within a metal chassis for eternity. This practice was phased out due to humanitarian concerns, and several high profile cases of MMIs being used to seal political dissidents away in the NRI, but returned when Nanotrasen R&D were able to quantify the existence of the Soul. The ensuing positronic brains were able to hold souls manufactured wholesale, creating an immortal workforce.

Modern History

Today, the ease of construction of synthetic life has led to a thriving amateur culture, and a recent online trend shows young people having their brains placed into a cyborg chassis either as a novelty or due to self-image issues, despite several high profile cases of civilian Id manipulators malfunctioning.

Faction Relationships

The Federation

The Humanities Protection Act (or HPA) forbids synthetic life from too closely resembling any Federation species, due to public outcry over Cybersun CEO Akihiko Nakayama showing to a congressional hearing with a lifelike synthetic surrogate, that only failed two days into questioning, beginning to make nonsensical statements.

In the core systems of the Federation, synthetic life is permitted to take jobs only in sectors that do not involve production of further synthetic life. While a synth or cyborg can work in farming, household care, education, and retail, among others, Federation space does not permit them to work in manufacturing plants or technological development. They are also not permitted to self-publish scientific papers, they must go through a surrogate.

The CIN

The CIN has notably failed to pass any major protectionist policies, fueling conspiracy theories that the transhumanist NRI is controlling its client states in the CIN through synthetic surrogates.

The Tiziran Empire

The Tiziran Empire has some of the strongest protectionist policies out of any alliance in known space.

They do not permit cyborgs of any kind to work, and only permit synthetic life to work in STEM, finance, and education within its borders, with some exceptions. Synthetic life must be clearly robotic and include a mark unique to the factory in which they constructed, though adherence to this is loose in frontier provinces and with independent contractors.