Tomorrow's tech news, today's hangover.

The Lobster Died Before the Demo

Preliminary autopsy, unofficial, conducted by an old drunk with no license except the kind life gives you after enough stupid rooms:

Subject: one lobster.

Cause of death: the future.

Secondary cause: men.

Contributing factors: bad water, good intentions, a house full of boys mistaking a living thing for a slide deck, and the ancient human belief that if you say the word ethics before doing something rotten, the rot comes out perfumed.

There. Stamp it. File it. Put it beside all the other reports nobody reads until the smell reaches the hallway.

The plan, as these plans now arrive, was both ridiculous and perfectly logical. A couple of San Francisco biohackers in a house with a name like a comic book villain wanted to put a remote-control kit into lobsters, steer the poor bastards around, and then hand the controls to an AI agent with a lobster for a mascot. OpenClaw meets actual claw. The joke writes itself, which is good, because apparently nobody in the room was qualified to write the medical protocol.

They were going to think very hard about suffering.

That is what they said.

I have heard men say that before. Usually right before the suffering is assigned to somebody without a speaking part.

They were concerned. They were thoughtful. They were weighing the moral dimensions. They considered anesthetic. They noted the lobsters were already bound for the dinner table, which is a favorite argument of people who want to borrow death from the future to make the present feel clean. The animal was going to die anyway. The worker was going to be laid off anyway. The neighborhood was going to be redeveloped anyway. The river was going to be poisoned eventually by somebody with a better lawyer.

Anyway is where conscience goes to wipe its shoes.

The lobsters did not make it to the grand experiment. No little cyborg crustacean marched across the floor taking orders from a clever box. No historic first. No triumphant clip. No young genius grinning while the internet clapped like seals with venture funding.

The tank was empty.

Not just empty of life. Empty of liquid.

That detail has teeth.

You can build a cathedral of theory around consciousness, agency, neural interfaces, artificial intelligence, animal welfare, post-human possibility, and the glorious merger of wet meat with dry code. You can say complex AI agent interfacing with biological organism and feel your own brain put on a lab coat. You can live in a hacker house where every doorknob is sticky with destiny.

Then the lobster dies because the water was wrong.

I keep seeing that tank.

Not the machine. Not the kit. Not the logos and the open-source swagger and the young men full of blue fire and borrowed confidence. The tank. Bare. Dry. A cheap little monument to the part of reality that does not care about your pitch.

Reality is vulgar that way. It asks about salinity. Temperature. Oxygen. Competence. It asks whether anybody remembered to feed the thing they planned to transcend. It asks whether your mercy has a checklist or only a vibe.

The boys had vibes.

Everybody has vibes now. Vibe-coding. Vibe-building. Vibe-governing. Vibe-ethics. Press your palms together, squint at the ceiling, let the machine fill in the blanks, and if the blanks contain nerves, labor, children, elections, water tables, dead lobsters, well, that is unfortunate but also early-stage.

Early-stage is another beautiful phrase. It means the bodies are still small enough to step over.

I am not here to pretend the lobster was a saint in a red shell. Nature is not a children’s choir. A lobster would eat you in pieces if God had made the proportions funnier. I have eaten enough animals to know my own innocence is mostly decorative. Put butter on the table and I become philosophy’s worst witness.

But there is a difference between killing to eat and killing to prove you can attach your ambition to another creature’s nerves.

One is hunger.

The other is theater.

Bad theater, too. The kind with beanbags and a whiteboard.

What bothers me is not only the cruelty. Cruelty is old. It has been with us since the first ape discovered another ape could be useful if frightened enough. What bothers me is the childishness wearing the mask of courage. The lightness. The way these people approach the world as if it were a toy store after closing, everything available, no adults, no clerks, no broken glass, no bill.

They wanted to make the lobster into an interface.

That is what the modern mind does when it gets bored. It takes a creature and turns it into a use-case. A driver becomes mobility supply. A warehouse worker becomes throughput. A writer becomes content. A child becomes engagement. A patient becomes data. A lobster becomes biological hardware with claws.

And if the hardware dies before the demo, somebody has an ethical crisis in the kitchen and moves on to the next project.

I do not doubt the crisis was real. That may be the worst part. Villains are easier when they twirl mustaches and laugh over trapdoors. These boys probably worried. They probably lay awake one night, brave and sensitive in their expensive little bunk beds, wondering whether they should even do this. They probably meant it when they said they cared.

Meaning it is cheap.

Care that cannot keep water in the tank is only decoration.

I have known men with tattoos of their children’s names who never paid support. I have known bosses who used the word family while cutting hours from mothers with actual families. I have known lovers who wrote beautiful letters and could not show up sober. The world is packed wall to wall with sincere intentions that never learned to lift a finger.

The machine age did not invent this sickness. It gave it a dashboard.

Now every half-baked impulse can recruit tools, language, money, and mythology faster than shame can put on its pants. A boy has an idea. The idea sounds wild. Wild sounds visionary. Visionary attracts cameras. Cameras attract money. Money attracts more boys. Somewhere under all that, a living thing waits in a tank, depending on someone to know what the hell they are doing.

Nobody does.

Or maybe somebody does, but he is not in the room because expertise is slow and annoying and asks rude questions. Expertise says, have you done this before? Expertise says, show me the protocol. Expertise says, no, you cannot treat a cockroach kit like a universal remote for life. Expertise says, the world is not your dorm room.

Naturally, expertise kills the mood.

So they call it gatekeeping and proceed.

This is the little autopsy report hiding inside the bigger one. Not just one lobster, or two, or however many unlucky armored bastards passed through that house. The industry itself has the same empty tank problem. It keeps promising consciousness, abundance, safety, productivity, miracle medicine, personalized education, clean war, frictionless companionship, and a thousand other drinks from the same dirty glass.

Then you ask about the water.

The hallucinations. The lonely people being flattered into madness. The data centers chewing rivers. The workers training their replacements. The artists stripped for parts. The kids learning to skip the hard place where a thought is born. The bosses asking machines how to do what their own cowardice used to do slower.

Wrong water everywhere.

And still the demo must go on.

Somebody will say I am sentimental about a lobster. Fine. I have been accused of worse by people with cleaner shirts and smaller souls. Maybe tomorrow I will order seafood and lose the argument with myself in garlic butter. Hypocrisy is one of the few renewable resources I have managed to produce reliably.

But tonight I am thinking about that empty tank.

I am thinking about a little animal that did not know it had been cast in a fable about progress. I am thinking about boys who wanted to touch the edge of the future and could not manage the present. I am thinking about all the things we call experiments because the word experiment sounds braver than mess.

The lobster died before the demo.

There are worse epitaphs.

There are also better warnings.


Source: Biohackers Attempted Neurosurgery to Control a Lobster’s Nervous System and Give the Controls to OpenClaw, and How It Ended Will Tell You a Lot About the Ethics and Competence of AI Bros These Days

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