Overclocked (10 page)

Read Overclocked Online

Authors: K. S. Augustin

BOOK: Overclocked
5.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Carl sighed and dropped his hand. He walked back over to the chain of large screens pinned against one wall.

“We’re both agreed that the Rhine-Temple needs to be taken down, right?”

Tania thought over each word in his state­ment, look­ing for a loop­hole. When she couldn’t find one, she nod­ded. “A bot­net is bad enough,” she said, “but one that has already de­veloped a de­gree of sen­tience doesn’t bear think­ing about.”

Be­com­ing more an­im­ated, Carl star­ted pa­cing in front of the boards.

“I’ve done a bit of dig­ging on the his­tory of the Rhine-Temple. Back when it first star­ted out, it was just a reg­u­lar bot­net, op­er­at­ing out of an ex­ploited server in the Middle East. In­struc­tions from its cre­at­ors were trans­mit­ted via an In­ter­net Re­lay Chat chan­nel.” He shrugged. “The usual. How­ever, when the cre­at­ors set the bot­net to in­filt­rate a Rus­sian spy server, things star­ted get­ting out of hand.

“What the cre­at­ors didn’t real­ise was that the Rus­sian server was ac­tu­ally be­ing run by ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence.”

Ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence har­nessed by a gov­ern­ment’s in­form­a­tion and se­cur­ity ser­vices? Tania thought of the im­plic­a­tions and mouthed a si­lent “wow”. “So the data min­ing op­er­a­tions that the Rus­sian server was en­ga­ging in…”

“…were be­ing handled by one or more ar­ti­fi­cial per­sons.” Carl nod­ded. “This goes bey­ond what most, maybe all, other se­cur­ity ser­vices have. The Rus­si­ans de­veloped a soph­ist­ic­ated set of self-tun­ing pro­grams, each with a small de­gree of sen­tience. By work­ing to­gether, the pro­grams were able to make de­cisions based on the data avail­able, their pre­vi­ous ex­per­i­ences and their own soph­ist­ic­ated al­gorithms. By run­ning con­cur­rently, they were able to mimic reas­on­ing that ap­prox­im­ated a hu­man’s.”

The story Carl was weav­ing was fas­cin­at­ing. Without lift­ing her gaze from his, Tania searched blindly for a chair, sink­ing into it heav­ily when she found one. Un­for­tu­nately, she thought she knew ex­actly where this story was lead­ing.

“The Rhine-Temple bot­net suc­cess­fully com­prom­ised that Rus­sian server, didn’t it?” she asked.

He made a click­ing sound with his tongue.

“Give the lady a prize,” he said, a smile break­ing across his face. “When the Rhine-Temple in­filt­rated the server,
some­thing
happened. The most prob­able ex­plan­a­tion is that the Rus­sian soft­ware tried to as­sim­il­ate the en­tire bot­net but couldn’t. In­stead, the
bot­net
conquered the
soft­ware
, one ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence at a time, in­cor­por­at­ing the data-min­ing heur­ist­ics into its own pro­gram­ming.”

“Be­com­ing the only semi-sen­tient piece of viral soft­ware in the world.” Tania's voice was hushed.

“And it’s been on a global kick for dom­in­ance ever since.”

Tania didn’t want to ask, but she could now fully un­der­stand the reas­on­ing be­hind Carl’s drive to de­feat the Rhine-Temple.

“How do you in­tend to stop it?” she asked.

“Al­most one of the first things the Rhine-Temple did when it joined with the Rus­sian AIs,” he said, sidestep­ping the ques­tion, “was to sever its con­nec­tion to its op­er­at­ors via the con­trolling IRC chan­nel. Once that happened, it be­came an autonom­ous agent. It’s been grow­ing and for­ti­fy­ing its de­fences ever since, but I don’t think it’s looked at that un­used IRC chan­nel since it was cut.”

“You want to in­filt­rate the bot­net through that chan­nel.” It was a state­ment, not a ques­tion.

He nod­ded.

Tania slipped lower into the chair, think­ing furi­ously.

“You dug up a lot of data on the Rhine-Temple,” she said, “but I don’t know how you did it. Secrets like the spy AI pro­gram suite you just de­scribed are held tighter than a fish’s arse­hole, if you’ll for­give the French. For starters, how do you know that that the bot­net in­filt­rated a
Rus­sian
in­tel­li­gence server?”

A voice be­hind her spoke up. “He knows it be­cause I told him.”

Tania was out of her chair in an in­stant and spin­ning around. Her heart thud­ded loudly in her chest. “And who the hell are you?” she asked, her eyes nar­row­ing.

But she already knew who it was. The height, the ro­tund white­ness, the two long floppy ears, were a dead giveaway. It was the white rab­bit, but it stood in­side Carl’s apart­ment, barely two metres away from her. Someone had man­aged to breach Carl’s se­cur­ity.

Tania glanced down at a nearby desk and saw the weapon she and Carl had used to des­troy the Rhine-Temple spider bots dur­ing their re­cent in­va­sion. She was about to make a grab for it when she felt a hand cap­ture her wrist, then Carl let go and brushed past her, clap­ping the rab­bit on the shoulder with ob­vi­ous pleas­ure.

“It’s been a while,” Carl said. Tania heard the loneli­ness in his voice and wanted to close her eyes at the sound of his un­der­ly­ing pain. She wondered if the rab­bit heard it too.

“For you per­haps,” the rab­bit replied, un­per­turbed.

Be­fore her eyes, the rab­bit began to morph. It shrank, its ears dis­ap­pear­ing into a smal­ler, more com­pact skull. The large white furry belly dis­ap­peared be­neath a navy blue t-shirt and the chubby legs were sub­sumed be­neath a pair of cas­ual tan trousers and sneak­ers. Tania looked back up to the rab­bit’s face again and saw an un­pre­pos­sess­ing young man with brown hair, fair skin and hazel eyes.

“Tania,” Carl said, turn­ing to make the ob­vi­ous in­tro­duc­tions, “this is Tomek Miller, also known by his avatar name of ‘Kru­lik’. Tom, this is—”

The rab­bit-that-was-now-a-man held up a hand. “No, don’t tell me,” he said, in slightly ac­cen­ted Eng­lish. “This is Doc­tor Tania Flowers, second cy­ber­naut of Base­ment Five.

“Al­though born in Lon­don, her par­ents moved to Cali­for­nia when she was a teen­ager. She com­pleted her un­der­gradu­ate work at Stan­ford and was awar­ded her doc­tor­ate by MIT. Her ma­jor area of in­terest is heur­istic com­put­ing with a minor in com­pu­ta­tion as it relates to or­ganic sys­tems’ bio­logy. She was offered vari­ous luc­rat­ive posts but turned them all down to take up a po­s­i­tion as lead­ing re­searcher for Speed­fish, a small but highly in­flu­en­tial think-tank that’s fully fun­ded by Rim­shot In­dus­tries.”

“How do you know all this?” Tania askedt, the hands at her sides slowly form­ing fists.

“We make it a point to keep up-to-date with our peers in other coun­tries.”

“‘We’?”

“Tania, this isn’t what it ap­pears,” Carl said, mak­ing a pla­cat­ory ges­ture with his open hand.

“It
ap­pears
that you’ve been trad­ing in­form­a­tion with someone from an­other gov­ern­ment,” she said bluntly. “Or am I wrong?”

“I’m from one of the friend­lier gov­ern­ments,” Miller said with a smile. “A gov­ern­ment that also has its fin­gers in some Rus­sian pies, if you take my mean­ing.”

Tania backed away, try­ing to edge closer to the desk where the ray weapon lay. “Don warned me about this.”

Carl moved away from Miller, tak­ing a step to­wards her. “Warned you about what?”

She dar­ted a quick glance at him be­fore set­tling back on the for­eigner. “Warned me about hos­tile gov­ern­ments com­pet­ing against us in cy­ber­space ex­plor­a­tion.”

“There are more of us than you think, Dr. Flowers,” Miller told her in a steady voice. “But we’re not all your en­emies.”

“I couldn’t have pieced everything to­gether without Tomek’s help,” Carl in­sisted, phys­ic­ally pla­cing him­self between Miller and her. Tania had no choice, she had to look at him.

“I un­der­stand Don’s con­cerns Tania, I really do, but they’re not war­ran­ted un­der these cir­cum­stances. Tomek has helped me with data and strategies. I wouldn’t be as far along in my re­search without him.”

She shif­ted her gaze bey­ond Carl’s shoulder, till they met can­did tawny eyes. “Do you live in cy­ber­space too? Like Carl’s done for the past…,” the word “fif­teen” choked in her throat, “…few years?”

Miller shook his head. “No. I'm usu­ally in the real world.” He jerked his chin up. “I have a team be­hind me. Every time I leave cy­ber­space, we swap in­form­a­tion. What I've found, what they've found. Tac­tics. Pro­gress re­ports. When I re-enter cy­ber­space, it takes me a few mo­ments to clock up. Of course, the pro­gress re­ports are usu­ally out of date by then, but the rest of the in­form­a­tion I’ve been shar­ing with Carl is, as he keeps telling me at least, solid gold.”

It soun­ded to Tania that he was try­ing to ex­plain him­self as much as an­swer the ques­tion.

“And have you heard Carl’s plan for des­troy­ing the Rhine-Temple?” she asked. Her eyes nar­rowed. “Do you agree with him?”

“In fact,” Miller said, cock­ing his head to one side, “I helped him to come up with it. So yes, I sup­pose you could say I agree fully with his plan.”

He flashed her an im­pudent grin and Tania sud­denly felt like a long-suf­fer­ing mother of two mis­chiev­ous brats.

“What are you do­ing here, Tom?” Carl asked, at the same time as Tania’s, “How did you get in?”

Miller looked from one to the other, then de­cided that he’d bet­ter an­swer Tania's ques­tion first. He was ob­vi­ously smart enough to know who he had to get on side.

“I have stand­ing per­mis­sion to enter Carl’s labor­at­ory,” he said. “Prob­ably be­cause, un­til now, there hasn’t been much of…in­terest go­ing on here.”

There had never been an­other mo­ment when Tania was so happy she didn’t sport a fair com­plex­ion. Des­pite this, her cheeks felt as if two spears of hot metal had been pressed against them. There must have been a dull flush evid­ent un­der her brown skin, how­ever, be­cause both men sud­denly grinned at her.

Maybe not­ing that her em­bar­rass­ment might quickly turn to ir­rit­a­tion, Miller quickly con­tin­ued. “And I’m afraid time’s run­ning out, Carl. Soon, the Rhine-Temple will be too big and dis­persed for us to des­troy com­pletely. We must start the job now. That’s why I’m here. To help.”

Carl’s lips tightened. “How much time do we have?”

“My team and I think we have no more than two cy­ber-days.”

“And you brought it?”

Miller pulled some­thing from his back pocket and held it up. It looked like a thick rect­an­gu­lar en­clos­ure of some sort, per­fectly sleek with roun­ded corners. Tania tried fo­cus­ing more clearly on it but the ob­ject de­fied such ex­am­in­a­tion, pulsing brightly through a gamut of col­ours. It was im­pen­et­rable but beau­ti­ful. It looked like Miller was hold­ing a carved shard of star­light in his palm.

“What is it?” she asked, her voice hushed.

“This is the soft­ware we hope will des­troy the Rhine-Temple,” Miller said. “But there are two prob­lems with it. Due to time con­straints, this is the one and only ori­ginal. I can get a backup sent down the line but that would take too much time. And,” he ad­ded, walk­ing past the other two to put the gleam­ing block on the desk, “this comes without a hand­shake shell.”

Carl scratched his neck, an un­con­scious move­ment that Tania had no­ticed months be­fore, from the time they first met. He al­ways made that ges­ture while deep in thought.

“Okay,” he said, “here’s what we do. Tom, make two cop­ies of that soft­ware here. I know it’ll take hours, but it’ll still be much quicker than wait­ing for a backup real-time. Tania and I will craft a shell for it. Once we’ve tested it, we’ll cover your soft­ware with our shell then…we go. And Tom,” he angled a look at his friend and Tania caught the soft­ness in his gaze, “thanks for com­ing. I ap­pre­ci­ate it.”

That soft­ness hadn’t been there three “real-time” days ago. Tania bit her lip. She thought about how much had changed. How much
could
change, if only they sur­vived this.

“Right.” Miller slapped his hands to­gether and the sound re­ver­ber­ated through Carl’s work­room like a gun­shot. “Let’s get to work.”

The next “day” passed in a haze of work, ar­gu­ment and counter-ar­gu­ment. Tania found she’d lost the urge to sleep, nap­ping only for an oc­ca­sional thirty minutes now and then. She com­men­ted on it to Carl and they agreed that her power naps were more a psy­cho­lo­gical ef­fect of the Blue rather than a phys­ical im­per­at­ive, much like his age­ing.

She snatched glances at her ex-rival while they worked and could have sworn he was look­ing younger than he did when she first saw him. Maybe it was the fact that her pres­ence con­firmed that only dozens of hours had passed in the real world, not the fif­teen years he thought he’d lived through. She wondered whether
she
, re­gard­less of ap­pear­ance, had also played a factor in his re­verse-age­ing.

At one point, he caught her watch­ing him.

“What is it?”

She glanced over at where Tomek Miller was work­ing. Tom was bent over a far table, cre­at­ing cop­ies of his dazzling code cap­sule. If he wanted to, he could hear their con­ver­sa­tion but seemed too in­tent on his own task. She knew that level of fo­cus well.

“It’s just…” She shrugged but con­tin­ued watch­ing Carl closely. “You’ve really changed, you know that?”

An edge of his mouth lif­ted up in a jagged smile. “Yeah, well, I don’t re­com­mend the cure for every­body. Fif­teen years of al­most sol­it­ary con­fine­ment in a uni­verse of data is a slightly ex­treme route to take.”

Other books

Raven on the Wing by Kay Hooper
Lie to Me by Tori St. Claire
Her Darkest Desires by Dane, Kallista
Lawyer for the Cat by Lee Robinson
Beneath Outback Skies by Alissa Callen
The Outrageous Debutante by Anne O'Brien