Big Brother In Space Version 0.10 May 2026
This is the true "Big Brother." No human watches the satellite feeds. In Version 0.10, a team of only twelve human overseers exists to confirm alarms raised by the AI. The AI watches everything. It tracks:
The developers of this system (who are, ironically, some of the most libertarian engineers in the world) argue that persistence is neutrality. They say: “We are not judging you. We are simply recording reality.”
They point to the benevolent use cases:
But the problem with an eye in the sky is that it cannot be turned off. The same infrared camera that spots a lost hiker in a blizzard can spot a political dissident meeting in a park at midnight. The same SAR that tracks illegal logging can track a column of refugees fleeing a border.
Version 0.10, as a pre-release, still has a "kill switch." The engineers maintain physical control over the ground stations. But the roadmap for Version 1.0 explicitly removes that kill switch. It migrates command authority to a distributed blockchain-based consensus. Once the satellites are up, no President, no CEO, no UN resolution can turn them off.
Overview
Key components
Capabilities (near-term, plausible)
Actors & incentives
Risks and harms
Legal, ethical, and governance gaps
Technological limitations and failure modes
Possible positive uses
Mitigations and design principles
Scenarios (illustrative)
Actionable policy starter pack (concise)
Concluding reflection
If you want, I can expand any section into a short policy brief, technical threat model, or a speculative vignette.
Big Brother In Space ) version 0.10 marks a significant developmental milestone for this adult-themed narrative game, focusing heavily on expanding the core sci-fi setting and character interactions. Narrative Setting The game places you on the U.S.S. Nostromo
, where you wake up nearly 200 years after the captain's stasis pod failed. You are guided by an alien named
, who manages the ship while balancing the "Prime Directive" regarding first contact. Version 0.10 continues to flesh out the main cast, primarily focusing on the player's interactions with three women: Ann, Lisa, and Alice Key Version 0.10 Features Expanded Amenities : New areas like the living room (featuring a ship library) and a steam shower
are accessible, enhancing the "slice-of-life" elements within the space station. Social Progression Big Brother In Space Version 0.10
: The update includes specific requests from characters, such as Lisa's desire for a , which you eventually unlock. Interaction Mechanics : You can use the ship’s replicators
to create items for other characters to use, which helps drive narrative progression. Mod Integration : A minor follow-up patch (
) was released shortly after to address game crashes related to missing images and item labels in the base game files. Gameplay Mechanics As a narrative adventure, the game uses a system of upgradable skills
—such as stealth, communication, and massage—which are improved through specific in-game actions to unlock new story branches. Progression often involves managing a station network and choosing sleepwear or outfits for the crew. storyline in this version? Big Brother in Space: The Love That Conquers All 26 Aug 2023 — Big Brother in Space: The Love That Conquers All
[Mod Update] [v0.1.1] | BIG BROTHER IN SPACE (BBIS) - Patreon 21 Nov 2023 —
Here is the revolutionary, terrifying shift. In Orwell’s time, Big Brother was the government. In Version 0.10, Big Brother is a subscription service. For $5,000 a month, a hedge fund can purchase the satellite feed of every agricultural field in Brazil to predict crop yields before the government reports them. For $50,000, a logistics company can monitor every competitor’s shipping containers in real-time. For free? You get a blurry, 24-hour-delayed image of your own house. But the AI still sees you in real time.
Currently, private companies like SpaceX (Starlink), Planet Labs (Dove satellites), and various national defense agencies operate separate constellations. Version 0.10 hypothesizes a handshake protocol between these networks. Your phone’s GPS triangulates your position; Starlink provides the bandwidth; Planet provides the optical feed; and a yet-unnamed defense contractor provides the SAR. In 0.10, these links are unstable. Occasionally, a satellite will drift out of formation, creating "blind spots" that last for up to six hours—a critical bug that smugglers and insurgents currently exploit. This is the true "Big Brother