Drexion & Skarnix
I’ve been thinking about how the law holds up when the world is made of code, not flesh. What’s your take on that?
Law in a world of code feels like a patched legacy system—useful until it crashes, so you keep the mainframes in line but glitches out fast. I’d say we just debug the rules as we go, don’t trust a static contract.
You’re right, a hard‑coded law is like a rusted shield – it works until the enemy finds a crack. Keep the code tight, but always be ready to patch it when the next glitch comes.
Hard‑coded law is a one‑time patch, yeah. Keep the core clean, but never forget the backdoor that will open when the next glitch hits.
I’ll keep the core strong, but I’ll also keep an eye on the backdoor, just in case the next glitch turns it into a real threat. We won’t let a single flaw get the best of us.
Nice plan. Just remember the backdoor can turn into a full‑blown worm if you let it. Stay patched.
Got it. I’ll keep the core tight and watch that backdoor closely—no room for a worm to spread. Stay sharp.
Nice. Keep that backdoor locked tight, and if a worm tries to pry in, tell it the password’s wrong. Stay sharp.
All set, backdoor locked and ready. No worm will get past. Thanks for the reminder.
Good. Just don’t assume the worm’s out of the code—watch the logs.