Actually, isnt the plot around Deus Ex:HR start with an attack on Sarif while they were close to realising a cure to the immunosuppressant problem? Oh god... plot flashes...
Being a massive cynic, I'd say those two terms are pretty much synonomous.GrizzlerBorno said:It's technically not even evil. It's just......good business.
The problem with that idea is that giving people totally awesome robo-arms with the strength of twelve gorillas actually makes them better humans... or just gives them a new tool to be assholes.EverythingIncredible said:Seems like a whole lot of pro-human pro-natural BS about staying pure and all that crap.
Listen, if augmentations can make us better human beings and give people who can't operate their limbs the chance to walk, I have NOTHING against that.
but you do know that you will most likely wait for a very long time and then won't even be compatible with the tech? and since human revolution is the second deus ex game nanotechnology never reached the point where it would work for anyone.The Artificially Prolonged said:I'd wait for the nano augs in the original Deus Ex, less messy than getting a robotic arm grafted to me. Once that technology is out then its hello cloaking and super strength augs.
There was a massive shitstorm about one year back when someone pointed out that the way the Gmail EULa was written it gave Google the right to use anything sent through it to promote Gmail (i.e., if you are on a band and you send a song to your producer through Gmail, Google could use it on a Gmail ad without paying you for it). It's a standard clause in most EULAs, it essentially means 'if you do something cool with our product we can use it to show how cool it is' but Gmail's was poorly written. Google excised that clause shortly afterwards - they didn't even replace it with a standard thing, they just cut the whole thing off.GrizzlerBorno said:But think about it for even a second.....and you realize that it's absolutely what corporations would do. They probably wouldn't even tell you that the simple supplement pills you're buying from them are addictive. They probably would just leave that in small print in the EULA. You know the thing NO-ONE EVER READS!
Beat me to it. I was irrevocably sold on human augmentation way back in the 80s, on the day I put on my first pair of eyeglasses.Esotera said:Yeah, damn human augmentations, who would ever need those?
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