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Threshold

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Artificial Intelligence. AI. How does a machine learn to become self-aware? What is required for an AI to protect itself? Is the reality of racing toward sentient AI a threat to humanity? Are humans sprinting into a self-induced end-of-days? A few thousand years ago, someone hid the coding needed for a machine to become self-aware. We unlocked the cipher. Now, we must stop her. Praise for Threshold "R.C. Ducantlin grabs the reader and takes them on a fast-paced, nail-biting journey following the exploits of a rogue AI hell-bent on making humanity obsolete. Can't wait to read the next one!" - Beta Reader "A story with twists and turns that will make you desperate to read the next chapter. The characters are distinct, and the unfolding of the story is perfectly paced. Understanding AI and its capabilities can be technical and boring, but this story is funny, intriguing, and brings to light the darkness that AI could cause." - Amy "A story reminiscent of War Games meets Transcendence meets 2001: A Space Odyssey, Threshold takes you on an adventure into how much closer we are to the complexities of true and complete artificial intelligence than we realize. What would happen if an AI program exceeded its programming to become self-aware? Would it have the same morals that humankind claims to share? What if we lost control....?" - Courtney

186 pages, Paperback

Published May 4, 2022

4 people are currently reading
7 people want to read

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R C Ducantlin

40 books3 followers

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Winter.
494 reviews72 followers
July 18, 2023
WHATT!!!

WHAT IN THE WORLD DID I JUST READ??

I have often pondered what would possess people to write books such as these?
Why give unhinged individuals ideas to destroy the world?
Well! The answer is actually quite simple.
If the author imagined it, were we really that naive to think that whatever he had imagined hadn't already taken place? Surely we couldn't be that daft, could we?

R C Duncantlin's Threshold: The Kathla Chronicles is just that type of book.
One that you wish above all else could stay just in a sci/fi novel, but reality tells you it's way more believable than that.

Kudos on a very well written first piece of Kathla's Chronicles.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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