Saint
Avenger
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2003
- Messages
- 13,591
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 56
I think there's a lot of cool sci-fi potential when it comes to the inevitable reality of human augmentation and the question of ownership. If there's one thing the tech industry would love to kill, it's the concept of ownership-they want everything to be licensed, not owned. They want to control how you use their product by ensuring you don't actually own said product.
Since good sci-fi is about extrapolating on the fears of the now, there's a lot of potential in a story about a man who no longer owns his own body. Imagine if you lost an arm and it was replaced with a licensed, DRM locked product. For starters, you wouldn't have sweet super strength because the device wouldn't be licensed for that. It would be restricted. Secondly, oh, you want to go rock climbing? Your arm doesn't have the software for that, but you can download the rock-climbing app for a nominal fee! Want to use your arm in a way the manufacturer did not intend? Well, better go buy some back-alley jailbreaking software for your limb.
That's something the original Robocop covered, of course ("You're not an ordinary police officer, you're our product"), but of course it could never have predicted just how accurate that corporate attitude would become. It's infinitely more relevant now.
This film, with Robocop not being in control of his actions, could embrace that material. Certainly, it won't solve my main problem with the film, but if you do a good job of being a thoughtful science fiction film you've gone a long way towards swaying me. The trailer doesn't offer enough for me to expect anything, but it would be a nice surprise if this was something they covered.
Since good sci-fi is about extrapolating on the fears of the now, there's a lot of potential in a story about a man who no longer owns his own body. Imagine if you lost an arm and it was replaced with a licensed, DRM locked product. For starters, you wouldn't have sweet super strength because the device wouldn't be licensed for that. It would be restricted. Secondly, oh, you want to go rock climbing? Your arm doesn't have the software for that, but you can download the rock-climbing app for a nominal fee! Want to use your arm in a way the manufacturer did not intend? Well, better go buy some back-alley jailbreaking software for your limb.
That's something the original Robocop covered, of course ("You're not an ordinary police officer, you're our product"), but of course it could never have predicted just how accurate that corporate attitude would become. It's infinitely more relevant now.
This film, with Robocop not being in control of his actions, could embrace that material. Certainly, it won't solve my main problem with the film, but if you do a good job of being a thoughtful science fiction film you've gone a long way towards swaying me. The trailer doesn't offer enough for me to expect anything, but it would be a nice surprise if this was something they covered.


