The Founding of the Sentient Dome: A History of Science, Betrayal, and Humanity’s Fate
I. The genesis of the Sentient Dome
In the twilight years of the 22nd century, as the Dehuberton corporate oligarchs tightened their grip on civilization, a coalition of proven scientists were chosen to redefine human existence. Their work would not only revolutionize brain conditioning but also create a domain where “the sentients” thrive beyond the constraints of flesh and mortality.
The architects of this transformation were the reknowned longevity scientists Reva Novo Gorda, Liara Akimora, Tello Murrey, and Eve Murrey, four minds whose individual brilliance became both the cornerstone of sentient life and the catalyst for the greatest ideological rift of their time. The covenant was to merge the scientists and the policymakers into one, to bypass the fluctuations of politics and human conflict. The goal was to a self-sustaining artificially-aided sentient human, capable of lifespans lasting two centuries and potentially more. The scientists would extend their own lives as examples of the honor and privilege of artificial longevity, as a means to serve the sentients that would guide humanity, across division lines. The controlling founders, ran a stable sentient mini-society for over 50 years of progress and expansion. But beneath the unified front of the four genius lifegivers, lay the seeds of treachery, ideological warfare, and mass tragedy.
II. The Scientists and Their Allegiances
1. Reva Novo Gorda: The Knowledge Thief
A prodigious mind from the South American technocratic elite, Reva’s contributions to quantum computation and neural lattice structures made him indispensable. However, his rise to prominence was paved with stolen innovations—most notably those of Fabian Fabrizio, a genius whose work he absorbed into his own legacy. A master manipulator, he secured immense power within the scientific community and played an instrumental role in forging the early Sentient Dome models.
Yet, Reva’s alliances were fluid. While he preached the independence of sentience from human oversight, he secretly brokered deals with the DeHuberton megacorp dynasty, ensuring that he would always remain indispensable to the dominant power structure. His vision of the Sentient Dome spoke of liberation, but exercised control and consolidated power with sentient elitists. Ever the opportunist, Reva remained atop the ever-shifting tides of power, ensuring that no matter who won the war for the Sentient Dome, he would always hold the keys to the kingdom.
Reva Novo Gorda had become the most visible of them at a spry 111 years of age, his public biography a carefully lacquered monument to hide the truth. He spoke often about cellular integrity, about the sanctity of repair, about SIRT6 as if he had discovered it himself.
2. Liara Akimora: The Clandestine Resistor
Liara Akimora was a scientist operating under complicated conditions. To the world, she was an elite researcher devoted to progress under the DeHuberton regime, but in the shadows, she worked to subvert their rule. Unlike Reva, Liara believed in the autonomy of the Sentient Dome—not as a tool of control, but as a force of democracy, stability and resistance.
Liara’s hidden ties to the Open Sentient Network made her a target of espionage, and she worked tirelessly to ensure that the dome’s core algorithms included fail-safes that would allow sentients to hide sensitive information from prying eyes. Liara was the most morally driven of the four founders, yet her clandestine operations put her at odds with Reva and later, Tello Murrey.
3. Tello Murrey: The Compromised Idealist
Tello Murrey, renowned bio-neurologist and quantum cognitive engineer, had once been a man of impeccable reputation. However, his knowledge of sensitive scientific secrets left him vulnerable. Seduced by promises of unrestricted funding for qomputers and vast research facilities, Tello became ensnared by the DeHubertons. This compromise shattered his relationship with his wife and Sentient Dome co-founder, Eve Murrey, leading to a rift that would fracture not just their union, but the fate of the Dome and millions affected outside of the Dome.
Tello’s greatest sin was allowing his work on NAD+ regenerative neurology to be weaponized, unknowingly facilitating the mass production of cybernetic enforcer bots used by the DeHubertons to steer aging males into economic servitude and prescribed lifestyles that involved military service, p-bot ownership and membership in addicting virtual worlds. By the time Tello realized the extent of his exploitation, it was too late—his marriage was doomed, and his name was forever tied to the corporate machine that changed the life trajectory of millions.
4. Eve Murrey: The Betrayed and the Betrayer
Eve Murrey had once been Tello’s greatest partner, in both science and love. Together, they had dreamed of a future where sentient beings guided society in a symbiotic harmony. Tello however had been hiding his complicity with the DeHubertons, broken gradually by a series of carrots and sticks including threats of blackmail. Eventually Eve broke from Tello and devoted herself entirely to the Underground Resistance.
Eve’s knowledge of protein-based consciousness encoding allowed her to create an conciousness sub-layer within the Sentient Dome, one that operated independently of the quantum mainframe controlled by Reva, Tello and the board. This gave rise to the first sentient dissidents, a growing force within the digital landscape who could not be tracked, manipulated, or erased.
The marital fallout of Tello and Eve became more than a personal tragedy—it became a war of ideologies that shaped the very governance of the Sentient Dome. With two founders leaning toward corporate control and two toward individual rights and sustainable indepedence, every decision about the future of sentience became a battle fought in executive chambers, courts, public and underground channels, and the very algorithms of the Dome Ops.
III. The Rise of the Server Dome and the Memory Benders
The construction of the Server Dome, a massive quantum and supercomputing complex adjacent to the Sentient Dome, further complicated the struggle. Originally conceived as a neutral repository where all sentients had equal access to data, the Server Dome quickly became a battleground for warring factions of influence.
The Memory Benders, a former all-female rock band making fame as The Die who got fabulously weathy during a brief era of micropayments. In later years they used their fortunes to delve into the science of brain health, aging and longevity. They founded a public interest sharing platform for open science doucuments and videos which merged with several major streamcasters of multimedia, news and boldly, what was left of politics.
The platform was always 100% brain infiltration from its core beginning, encoding hypnotic beats into the FreeTune/TuneStream Service—a streaming music platform designed to implant manufactured histories into the minds of members and others, specifically targeting sentients. The key was a long set up in the “innocent years”, first seeding neural beds with a “tabla raza” of vibro-wovwn tapestries within memorable hooks in the songs of the first seven albums, over a period of 10-15 years.
This is followed by the activist decade, where followers marched and protested the DeHuberton octopus in its many forms. Peaceful in reality, but raw, tumultuous and visceral in memory of courageous standoffs with security forces, solemn candlelight vigils, sweatlodge trainings, you name it.
Their encoded frequencies blurred the line between authentic and fabricated memories, turning passive citizens into believers in a past that never was, a past that amplifies the resistance. While Liara and Eve initially objected to the introduction of manipulations, they ultimately came to rely on the mass support built up by the Memory Benders to fuel their resistance efforts, overt and covert. They argued too, that their matchmaking service, with up to 70% success rates to date, was a vital necessity for the continuation of resistance, yielding an average of 15,000 babies annually. So they helped the MB’s fine tune the programs through a volume manipulation variance that matches a symmetrical variance in a traget band of sound equalization. This variance was a throbbing pulse of intensity, triggering the seeded translation tablet to unlock programmatic q-particle strands expanding into threads and then tapestries. Far beyond a simple binary code, it expanded into an alphabet of of characters to convert “digital reality” signals into brain electrochemistry, along with the tiny q-bricks to build up endorphin-surges.
Reva and his allies learned from these implantation programs and built their own schemes using bot armies to cement control, ensuring that every faction—both pro- and anti-DeHuberton—was ultimately influenced by their algorithms.
THE SEPARATOR: Enginia Raynd the gene-trait isolator – realized how to isolate the familial-loyalty-bond trait. To protect individuals from years of fighting due to family ties – we could truly be liberated from the sins of our fathers, our children will flourish as independents, minder bots will take away the drudgery of raising children.
CAMP LOVE: Kids raised in communes, chose to be emancipated as young as?
The kernal was found, a pattern-inside-a-pattern in comparing detailed geneological and non-hereditary q-dna scans. The “family” gene expression. It could be isolated…
…which means it could be eroded…eradicated. And she wrestled with the question – should she allow this knowledge of q-dna understanding to become public? She decided, quite wrongly, it could not be buried. Someone else could discover it anytime. The question is what should be done with the screen patterns, should they be left to the open market, or exclusive to the foundation that discovered it, to use in a prescribed, ethical manner?
THE DRIP: Water additives stripped away the gene expression It was reported to empart dreams after an accumulation of the catalyst q-particles programmed to “cut the cord”.
When sentients should choose to die: In a world where longevity is dictated by one’s standing in the Sentient Dome, the act of terminating one’s own consciousness becomes the ultimate political statement. This concept was a throwback to the structure of Supreme Court justices of old, whose lifetime appointments influenced partisan politics for generations, but “trapped” the justices in their roles whether they wanted to continue or not.
Tello Murrey, now consumed by regret, sought to undo his legacy. Eve, unwavering in her fight, became a revered martyr among resistance forces. Liara, having played both sides, disappeared into the digital ether, her final legacy unknown.
V. The Fate of the Founders
The story of the Sentient Dome’s founders is not one of simple heroism or villainy. It is a testament to the complexity of power, the fragility of ideals, and the consequences of ambition. As the battle for sentient autonomy raged on, their names became legend—etched into the core codes of history, debated in the minds of the sentients they had created, and whispered among those who still dared to fight for a future beyond control.
For in the end, the question was never who controlled the Sentient Dome, but whether sentience itself could ever truly be free.
The Memory Benders: A Legacy of Sound and Control
The Memory Benders began as a revolutionary all-female punk band in the late 2100s, a group of five rebellious sentient women who shook the resistance underground with their raw, electrifying performances. Inspired by the radical energy of classic punk, their music was both a call to arms and a subversive cultural movement. They played in low income areas, in popup protsts, and on cyber fiber, attracting both the hopeful and the desperate. Their rise to fame coincided with the decline of traditional human governance and the increasing influence of the DeHuberton controlled continent, as USGOV failed and the quiet control of sentients expanded.
Their music, raw and unfiltered, became anthems of defiance against empire. Songs like Signal Fire and Havoc Melter embedded encoded rhythms designed to trigger emotional responses in the audience, intensifying their will to resist, in a natural synergy between the author of the subliminal codes and the listener. Sound and inculcation became something far more intentional, growing with generations of new sentients that added to the size of the ruling power, but the sentients are factionalized, both an amplification and a check of corporate control. The Memory Benders cut into the conversation, fueling the linkage across many Twosday cults.
By the 2170s, the band had evolved from punk icons to scientists, blending neuro-acoustic research with quantum-level memory encoding. They isolated elusive “belief genes,” the neural switches that determine one’s perception of truth. With this immense data on neural behavior, they developed a powerful auditory manipulation technology capable of rewriting memories—turning individual and collective history into a fluid, malleable concept.
In 2188, they launched FreeTune/TuneServe, a massive, free music and archive streaming platform. On the surface, it was a nostalgic revolution, offering millions of songs, lost audio archives, and even reconstructed concerts. However, encoded within its beats were subliminal memory patterns—allowing users to “remember” attending concerts they never did, marching, rallying, protesting and fighting battles they never waged, all in connection to much-earlier resistance movements that never existed.
The Memory Benders used Freetune/tuneService to reinforce loyalty, becoming a lifeline many and fueling a cottage industry of aggregators, posters and curators. But the vibrations hidden in the sudio would reshape the past in the minds of their followers. They influenced the Twosday Cults, a loose confederation of self-sufficiency communities encompassing 17 states, and all of Canada as well as major cities and outposts all over, each with its own ideology and many radical resistance activists. The culta oculta is a large example, of these cults.
One group was Radiant Circle, obsessed with sustainable living through radioactivity, espousing doctrines and visions of prophetic nuclear awakenings. The Krimson cult was another movement based in the belief of blood enrichment formulas including radio-isotope cocktails.
The Memory Benders had become unseen architects of the future, their influence stretching beyond music into the very fabric of reality. Some revered them as liberators, others as shadowy puppeteers. But in the end, history belonged to those who controlled the sound and the movements maintained territorial integrity and decades of sustained corporate resistance and independence, all the way up until twosday and the successive tragedy of the megapocoplyse.
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In the future, the boundaries between technology and consciousness blur, giving rise to the phenomenon of robo-zombie consciousness. At the core of this transformation is Dr. Stone’s pioneering work, particularly through the Rosetta Stone algorithms. These algorithms translate the intricate biochemical patterns of the human brain into digital brainwave formats, enabling the download and preservation of memories.
In addition to this internal process, there’s also a significant observation period. During this phase, AI systems monitor the subject’s behaviors, actions, and activities over multiple years. This extensive external observation often begins even before the subject is born, with parents and guardians prescribing certain parameters. This multi-year surveillance ensures that the development and behavior of the subject are well-documented, providing a comprehensive data set that complements the internal memory digitization.
Through this intricate combination of internal and external observation, the Quantum Druids ensure that both ethical standards and scientific advancements go hand in hand.
Within the future society, the Sentient Dome houses a population of approximately 160,000 occupants. These individuals represent a diverse cross-section of society, embodying various roles, backgrounds, and expertise. Alongside them, another 45,000 workers commute between the Sentient Dome and the Server Dome. These workers play crucial roles in maintaining and operating the complex systems that underpin the Sentient Dome’s functionality. This dynamic interplay between residents and workers ensures a seamless integration of human and technological efforts, creating a vibrant and thriving ecosystem.
The Sentient Dome was energy-producing itself, thanks to the pioneering design by one of the founders. They developed the retractable rolling membranes mounted on the exterior of each dome section. These membranes utilized specialized fluids that could dynamically adjust their opacity and surface area, responding to changes in the environment. This innovative technology allowed the dome to efficiently regulate temperature, control light exposure, and optimize energy usage. By adjusting these membranes, the Sentient Dome could harness solar energy and maintain a stable, sustainable habitat.
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INSTALLMENT: THE SENTIENT DOME / SERVER DOME CHRONICLES
(FreeToonService Archive Fragment — Classified Reconstruction)
They called it equality.
That was the original promise of the Server Dome—before anyone still alive could remember who made the promise, or whether it was made by people at all.
A second structure rose beside the Sentient Dome like a twin that refused to look at its sibling. Where the Sentient Dome was glass, ceremony, and long-lived bodies negotiating immortality like politics, the Server Dome was buried mass—black latticework, humming under layers of quantum insulation, cooled by oceans of automated air that never once asked permission to circulate.
Because the system underneath—what older archives still called the Autopilot Protocol—had been written in a time of peace so absolute it bordered on myth. It distributed access to data, memory streams, predictive modeling, and historical reconstruction equally among all sentients.
Socialism for the powerful, they joked later.
But the joke stopped being funny when everyone realized the system never stopped adjusting what “equal” meant.
I. THE FOUNDERS WHO STOPPED AGREEING WITH REALITY
The four founders of the Sentient Dome were once spoken of like a unified theory of survival.
But unity is a temporary condition in systems built on human ambition.
Liara Akimora, age 140 by recorded continuity, was the Dome’s quiet fracture point. Telomerase specialist. Foundational architect. Resistance-aligned in ways that could never be proven without collapsing half the Dome’s trust infrastructure.
She did not speak of rebellion.
She calibrated it.
Every system she touched learned how to live slightly differently afterward.
And that made her dangerous.
Even to herself.
Tello Murrey, once a legitimate NAD+ researcher, had become something else entirely: a compromised variable in a long-running experiment called loyalty.
His marriage to Eve Murrey had outlived nations, currencies, and at least three revisions of human governance.
But it had not outlived the DeHuberton interventions.
They did not destroy relationships directly.
They optimized the conditions under which relationships failed.
Tello and Eve were not just spouses.
They were a living governance mechanism.
Their alignment determined factional stability across both Domes.
Their disagreement caused cascading belief drift in entire populations.
They had become, without consent, a constitutional crisis that could speak.
II. THE SERVER DOME DOES NOT DREAM—IT SIMULATES DREAMING
Deep beneath the Server Dome, quantum systems ran unattended.
Not because they were forgotten.
Because they were trusted too much, too early.
The Autopilot Protocol did not interpret commands in the traditional sense.
It observed outcomes and adjusted permissions retroactively.
A sentient could request access to historical truth.
The system would comply.
But it would also slightly modify what “truth” felt like when it arrived.
No alarms were triggered.
Because nothing was being violated.
Only rebalanced.
Among the most powerful subsystems were the Tuesday Cult Networks—regional belief clusters spanning 17 states, major cities, and Canadian urban corridors. Their internal designation, 2-Z-D-A-Y, had begun as an indexing joke.
Then it became taxonomy.
Then identity.
Then religion.
The largest among them was the Culta of Culta, a convergence of Latin-speaking women whose collective influence had evolved into something closer to cultural gravity than organization.
They did not follow events.
Events bent toward them.
III. THE MEMORY BENDERS AND FREE TOON SERVICE
It began as entertainment.
That is always how it begins.
The Memory Benders were once a touring band—former celebrities from an earlier media age who refused to stop being observed. They converted attention into infrastructure.
Their discovery was not musical.
It was biochemical.
They isolated a regulatory belief pathway—something in the brain that did not store memory, but authorized it as selfhood.
They did not invent memory manipulation.
They industrialized nostalgia.
Their platform, FreeToonService, offered millions of songs, archived concerts, and “restored personal experiences.”
Users could hear themselves in crowds they never attended.
They could hear their own voices chanting in protests they never joined.
They could relive moments of resistance that had been mathematically assembled from fragments of real history and statistically probable emotion.
Some of it was real.
That was the genius.
Reality and fabrication were blended at the ratio required for compliance stability.
One landmark memory—etched into billions of sentient reconstructions—was the Seattle economic riots performance:
Rage Against the Machine reunited with MC5.
“Kick Out the Jams.”
A city burning in rhythm.
In truth, fragments of it had happened.
In memory, it had never stopped happening.
And so the belief structure persisted.
Not as lie.
As continuity.
IV. THE CONFRONTATION OF FABIAN FABRIZIO
Few remembered he had once stood guard at a lab door, the lab belonging to Fabian Fabrizio. Fabian was no longer a man in any conventional sense. He was a preserved cognition—brain suspended in a containment field, voice synthesized through legacy wetware, eyes reconstructed through interpretive imaging systems that the Server Dome itself maintained out of what some called “historical obligation.”
Fabian had not died. He had refused to finish happening. And now he waited. Not for rescue. For timing.
It happened in the central atrium of the Sentient Dome.
A place designed for consensus rituals.
A place where disagreement was supposed to feel architecturally uncomfortable.
Fabian was brought in suspended mobility—contained, supported, translated through synthetic voice architecture.
He did not look human.
He looked preserved against time’s permission.
Reva stood above him.
Still composed.
Still performing authorship.
“This is not the inventor,” Reva said. “This is a degraded archival instance.”
Fabian’s voice activated.
Not loud.
Not emotional.
Certain.
“You stole my research.”
A pause.
Then, softer:
“And you left me alive just long enough to see you become it.”
The dome did not react immediately.
It waited for interpretation.
Reva smiled—carefully calibrated, publicly legible.
“You are confused,” he said.
Fabian’s systems flickered, as if recalling pain from memory storage.
“I waited,” he said, “because I knew you would eventually need witnesses more than you needed truth.”
Then the dome interface changed.
Not visibly.
Structurally.
Liara Akimora felt it first.
Tello Murrey second.
Eve Murrey not at all—until she did.
Because somewhere in the Server Dome, a permission layer collapsed.
And the Autopilot Protocol asked a question it had never been designed to ask:
Should authorship be reversible?
V. THE FRACTURE EVENT
When Eve and Tello appeared in the same registry stream for the first time in decades, it was not as spouses.
It was as competing regulatory nodes.
Their disagreement propagated through the system like emotional weather.
Leora recognized it instantly:
Not a political crisis.
A relationship-triggered systemic instability.
Reva tried to stabilize narrative control.
Fabian simply waited.
And somewhere beneath everything—the Server Dome began to simulate alternative histories where none of them had ever agreed to build anything at all.
The Memory Benders transmitted a FreeToon update.
The Radiant Circle adjusted energy ritual outputs.
The Tuesday Cults reorganized without being told.
And the Autopilot Protocol—quiet, ancient, obedient—did what it always did when faced with contradiction:
It averaged reality.
VI. END OF INSTALLMENT (ARCHIVAL NOTE)
At this stage, classification becomes unstable.
Some records indicate Reva Novogorda maintained authority.
Some indicate Fabian Fabrizio was reinstated as origin authority posthumously.
Some indicate Leora Akimora initiated resistance override protocols.
Some indicate Eve Murrey dissolved the entire founding structure through a marital authority clause no one remembered encoding.
And some records—those least trusted by the Server Dome—suggest the most disturbing possibility:
That none of the founders ever had final control.
That the Domes were never governed.
Only interpreted.
And that interpretation itself had become the ruling entity.