[ after a few moments of thinking, because while he doesn't really care about shittalking freelancer, he wonders how much of it is actually public knowledge.
but for the most part he doesn't care, so. ]
FROM: washington@cdc.org Project Freelancer was given an AI by the UNSC when it started. The Director assigned his fragments to different agents.
FROM: washington@cdc.org Made him run countless simulations that he thought were real. Made him fail. He'd split off a personality trait just to cope with it.
[ He figured that the pain from the surgery and the effects after were just normal; and when Alpha popped into his head later, because he had already gone through that.
Huh.
Granted, his surgery was different from the others anyway. And that's beyond the line of things he's going to reveal. ]
FROM: washington@cdc.org The experiment with the fragments was canceled days later, and he was removed before I even got out of medical.
FROM: washington@cdc.org Storage, usually. Unless they're needed for something. One of them thought I'd destroy it once it was out of the hands of the enemy, but that's not the case.
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That despite being a computer program, they definitely don't all act like that.
FROM: washington@cdc.org
Unless you're wondering how I know that.
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I am wondering how you know that.
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but for the most part he doesn't care, so. ]
FROM: washington@cdc.org
Project Freelancer was given an AI by the UNSC when it started. The Director assigned his fragments to different agents.
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You can't fragment AIs.
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I don't know exactly how he managed to make an actual AI out of it.
FROM: washington@cdc.org
But he tortured him in order to get him to create split personalities.
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Tortured them.
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Made him run countless simulations that he thought were real. Made him fail. He'd split off a personality trait just to cope with it.
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Have you ever experienced it?
1/2
ugh ]
2/2
Yeah. They gave me the last one before the Project started failing.
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I meant having an AI in your head.
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FROM: washington@cdc.org
Yes.
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It would be painful, with just a fragment.
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Huh.
Granted, his surgery was different from the others anyway. And that's beyond the line of things he's going to reveal. ]
FROM: washington@cdc.org
The experiment with the fragments was canceled days later, and he was removed before I even got out of medical.
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FROM: 117@cdc.org
How long were you in medical? I was in medical for three hours?
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FROM: washington@cdc.org
Four, maybe five days.
FROM: washington@cdc.org
There were complications.
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I'm concerned.
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I don't know what for, but it doesn't matter. They removed him, the project started to fall apart and I got better.
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You can't remove the implant unless they ripped your spine out.
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I still have an AI slot in my head. They just pulled his program.
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If you need anything, contact me.
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no, no you're not supposed to be nice to him!! now he has to be nice back and he doesn't know how or want to. ]
FROM: washington@cdc.org
I'll keep an eye for your AI. I've spent a lot of time recovering ones that were in trouble before.
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FROM: 117@cdc.org
What happens after AIs are recovered?
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Storage, usually. Unless they're needed for something. One of them thought I'd destroy it once it was out of the hands of the enemy, but that's not the case.
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I see.
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