quite possibly a cat wrote:The current assassin nano can't be used to spy. It isn't able to extract any info from the target. If can't make the person type up secrets unless you already know what they are supposed to type.
If it COULD do that you'd have a way more potent weapon, and Manticore would be in much bigger trouble!
ldwechsler wrote:I was just trying to have a bit of fun. And there might be ways to do it anyway.
Just have the muscles sent out the latest intelligence info file to a set address. As part of the setup, the person must be alone and finishing an important analysis or report.
Possible? Possibly.
But having the guy doing the funky chicken is far more fun. OR the electric slide, if that's what you prefer.
munroburton wrote:Each time we saw the nanites used up and close, the victims were quite aware that their bodies were acting against their will.
In two instances, they had long enough to realise they were going to die(Rajampet and Grosclaude). Meares' mindglow also alerted Honor.
So even if it were possible to have an infected victim upload the contents of their hard drive to a predefined address - the victim in question would know what they had just done. As soon as the nanotech releases them, they can raise the alarm and the entire star system goes into lockdown before the message can leave.
Actually, I believe, there was one instance where the
infected victim was at least partially unaware that he was doing something he hadn't intended to do.
Torch of Freedom, Chapter 29 wrote: William Henry Tyler stood in the throne room, waiting patiently with the rest of the crowd, and rubbed idly at his right temple. He felt a bit...odd. Not ill, really. He didn't even have a headache. In fact, if anything, he felt just a bit euphoric, although he couldn't think why.
<snip>
He glanced down at his brief case and felt a brief, mild stir of surprise. It vanished instantly, in a stronger surge of that inexplicable euphoria. He'd actually been a bit startled when the security man asked him what was in the case. For just an instant, it had been as if he'd never seen it before, but then, of course, he'd remembered the gifts, for Queen Berry and Prince Ruth. That had been a really smart idea on Marketing's part, he conceded. Every young woman he'd ever met had liked expensive perfume, whether she was willing to admit or not.
He relaxed again, humming softly, at peace with the universe.
Just before this passage Harper S. Ferry, Judson Van Hale and Genghis, who were on guard duty in the room, had noticed Tyler, precisely because he was the only one of the about 30 people waiting for Berry to be carrying a briefcase. Now as soon as they noticed him, Genghis was asked if there was anything off about him. And he said
no, of course, this was across the room from Tyler, up close he might have been able to pick up on Tyler's euphoria.
Now when Berry entered the room Tyler's programming went to the next phase. We don't have any more of Tyler's POV, but from the textev he must have realized he wasn't in control of his actions.
Torch of Freedom, Chapter 29 wrote: ...Tyler looked up and saw Berry. Unlike any of the other commercial representatives in the room, he took a step towards her the moment he saw her, and Genghis's head snapped up in the same instant.
The cat reared high, ears flattened and fangs bared in the sudden, tearing-canvas ripple of a treecat's war cry, and vaulted abruptly from his person's shoulder towards Tyler.
Tyler's head whipped around, and Harper felt a sudden stab of outright terror as he saw the terrible, fixed glaze of the other man's eyes. There was something...insane about them, and Harper was suddenly reaching for the panic button on his gun belt.
My point is, that carrying that briefcase, which had never been part of
his (as opposed to the MAlign's) intentions didn't set off Genghis's warning senses. Of course, Tyler had probably spent most of his career carrying briefcases to meetings with potential clients, it was second nature to him.
As an aside, my epub version of
ToF actually does say "
Prince Ruth," I hadn't even noticed it before now, and since I don't currently have access to my dead tree copy I don't know if it also contains this typo.