Go Into Space And Become Immortal With Richard Garriott

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Go Into Space And Become Immortal With Richard Garriott


Tabula Rasa [http://www.rgtr.com/] creator and soon-to-be astronaut Richard Garriott is giving 40 gamers a chance to have their DNA taken into space as part of Operation Immortality, a fail-safe against the destruction of the human race.

International Space Station [http://www.ncsoft.com] in October. The DNA will be stored on an "Immortality Drive," which will also contain samples taken from "the world's brightest minds, most powerful bodies, and cultural standouts" as a kind of backup against global catastrophe.

Along with the winners' DNA, the Immortality Drive will contain the player data of everyone who's ever played Tabula Rasa, along with a log of personal messages sent by Tabula Rasa players prior to Garriott's launch. As part of the event, gamers can also vote in polls on the Operation Immortality website to help select mankind's greatest achievements.

Asked about his own choices for humanity's greatest achievements, Garriott named two. "The first great achievement was our ability to perceive the universe and our place within it," he said, an awakening which led to a "journey of scientific curiosity." The second resulted from the launch of Sputnik, heralding humanity's first steps into space. "When we first began to leave the cradle of our life here on earth," he said. "Space travel in modern times is our most significant achievement."

Interested gamers with an active Tabula Rasa will automatically be entered into the contest (free trial accounts are eligible) with eight winners being drawn each week for five weeks beginning on August 4. Winners will be mailed a DNA test kit and instructions on how to properly forward their samples for analysis and processing, but will not be given access to the results of the test. All entries must be received by midnight CST on August 31 in order to be eligible for the drawing.

"Global warming, bio-terrorism, errant asteroids and genetic science gone awry could wipe humanity from the face of the Earth," the project's website says. "Operation Immortality is a real once in a lifetime event that will save a history of humanity's greatest achievements, digitized human DNA, and personal messages from all over the world."

"This archive, humanity's 'saved game,' will be stored on the International Space Station in October 2008 by Richard Garriott, the creative force behind the Tabula Rasa videogame and Earth's sixth private citizen to travel into space," it continues. "If the ultimate disaster strikes, this our best, last hope against extinction."

Based on what I've seen so far, I'm not convinced that resurrecting humanity in the event of a self-induced wipeout is such a hot idea to begin with, but Garriott did create the operationimmortality.com [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultima_(video_game_series)].

(photo [http://flickr.com/photos/robfahey/148381164/])


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Virgil

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Jun 13, 2002
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Shouldn't they take the Tabula Rasa servers into orbit too? It's the only way to be sure.
 

dudesrug

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Jun 3, 2008
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i'd of thought penicillin was probably a little more important than sputnik, but then again i'm no richard garriot
 

HobbesMkii

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Jun 7, 2008
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Is Garriot's DNA included in this thing? What if I don't want my hypothetical spawnings to co-mingle with his?
 

DeadlyYellow

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Jun 18, 2008
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I find something disturbingly alienating about a game company asking for my DNA. Especially if they plan on giving it to Richard Garriot.

And what exactly do they hope to do with it? Cloning? That's even more disturbing for all the flaws a copy human would have.

What's next? Egg and semen samples of gamers?
 

ElArabDeMagnifico

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Dec 20, 2007
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DeadlyYellow said:
I find something disturbingly alienating about a game company asking for my DNA. Especially if they plan on giving it to Richard Garriot.

And what exactly do they hope to do with it? Cloning? That's even more disturbing for all the flaws a copy human would have.

What's next? Egg and semen samples of gamers?
Yes, Garriot will use the DNA for the plethora of NPC's, and the Egg and Semen samples will be for new characters joining this real life MMORPG.

A real life MMORPG in space, with no monthly fee! Just one trip to mars!

Richard is quite innovative.
 

Alex_P

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Mar 27, 2008
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From the Wikipedia article on the ISS:
"The projected completion date is 2010, with the station remaining in operation until no earlier than 2016."

That's really, err, immortal there.

You'd probably have better luck spitting in a jar and burying it in your backyard.

-- Alex
 

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Man, you guys are so depressingly negative. I would totally love to sputz in a jar for Richard Garriott.
 

PurpleRain

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Malygris said:
Man, you guys are so depressingly negative. I would totally love to sputz in a jar for Richard Garriott.
You may wanna rephrase that sentence.

ElArabDeMagnifico said:
"Go into space and become immortal"

Aweseome!

"with Richard Garriot"

pass
Exactly. Space! Imortality! The two most awesome thing outside Vikings, robots and Ninjas! Wait, hold on, what's this fine print. Richard Garriot?!
 

Alex_P

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Mar 27, 2008
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On the website, you can look at messages other people have left. First one that popped up when I read it:
"No fat chicks."

-- Alex
 

Jumplion

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Alex_P said:
On the website, you can look at messages other people have left. First one that popped up when I read it:
"No fat chicks."

-- Alex
I spent 10 minutes just looking for that message. That's great.
 

Alex_P

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Mar 27, 2008
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I'm imagining how this project was concocted.

"So, Richard, you're going into space."
R: "Yeah, pretty cool, huh?"
"Think we can turn that into some kind of publicity thing for your products?"
R: "Oh, sure. Get fans really involved in it. I could, I dunno, stick a knick-knack in my pocket and leave it up there."
"Any ideas?"
R: "How about a pen drive with everyone's Tabula Rasa character?"
"Let's dress it up some more."
R: "Oooh! I know! And the world's history and some DNA samples and it'll be a big fancy 'save game' for all mankind! And pictures of General British!"
"Let's go make a website!"

The alternative (that Richard Garriott thinks that this is actually somehow an actually worthwhile endeavor) is almost too scary to contemplate.

-- Alex
 

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Okay, aside from concerns that Garriott's past incarnations as Lord and General may have been a bit, well, weird, where's the resistance to this project coming from?
 

Alex_P

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Mar 27, 2008
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Malygris said:
Okay, aside from concerns that Garriott's past incarnations as Lord and General may have been a bit, well, weird, where's the resistance to this project coming from?
Because it's pure hype that makes absolutely no sense, of course!

Richard Garriott paid a bunch of money to have some fun in space. He's going to use his trip as an excuse to talk about how great Tabula Rasa is. When he goes up, he's going to put a pen drive in his pocket and leave it on the ISS, where it'll be forgotten by the people who live and work there. Then he'll come back to Earth and talk about how great Tabula Rasa is. That's it.

It's obviously 100% bullshit. If this was actually about historical records and data about humanity's supposed best and brightest, would they really have it share a pen drive with a data-dump of Tabula Rasa characters and a bunch of random messages ranging from overused Albert Einstein quotes to "No fat chicks"?

The whole thing is based on a bunch of sci-fi nerd fantasies (and fallacies) that Garriott is either pandering to rabidly or entertains himself.

Our "last hope" in the event that, what, some mega-disaster wipes out not only all humans but all human genetic data in any form, and then magic aliens come within the few decades that the ISS is actually in orbit and randomly pop in this particular pen drive and understand what's on it and decide to revive the species? Or are there no magic aliens and it's all up to the astronauts on the ISS to clone humanity and repopulate the completely-life-free world? Does any part of this make sense?

He'd have better luck preserving humanity if he just randomly threw his glorified time capsule at the moon.

The only message here is "buy Tabula Rasa." But why would you want to, knowing that they'll just waste your money on gimmicks like this?

What is there to like, exactly?

-- Alex