Monday 3 February 2014

Talinz in everyday life: domestic servants



Much more than just sport, Talinz permeate everyday life, and affect the way people interact with each other and with society. These frames tend to be offered in two general formats: those for domestic use, and those for industrial use. Their jobs vary widely within these two very broad clades, and they are present in every economic sector, for better or worse.
Domestics
People will always clamour for the next new gadget, especially if it is billed as something that makes life easier. And just like the washing machines and the televisions of a post-war world before, the Talinz fell into the newfound prosperity gap of the post-Baku treaty era. For a one-off fee, small maintenance costs and a slight addition to the electrical bill, a family could have a machine to take the kids to school, take care of them if they were too young, or if parents had to stay late, manage the family finances, and wash, cook and clean to boot. It was too good to resist.
In the present, Talinz are extremely common. With a few exceptions – mainly from those who are opposed to their existence altogether, or those who have a political interest in ‘liberating’ the frames – every family has one. One might see a few hundred whilst out walking through a busy shopping centre, many likely out doing weekly groceries for their families, or perhaps picking up more specific items. If a family has a fancy new model, you might find it indistinguishable from a human walking down the street.
Such robot-human similarities has led to a number of campaigners attempting to enforce some kind of identification protocol, or stop production of these human-likes completely, under the grounds that mistaking a human for a Talinz unit could lead to any number of awkward or dangerous social encounters. Opposition to these groups have been strong, however. Many want more human-like figures. The common people have begun to empathise with Talinz in a heretofore unseen way, and having a housemaid that looks less robotic enough and so doesn’t scare the children is always a bonus. With Hana Electrics’ use of common fictional characters or the social media interfaces offered by the American Landon Corp, many people want their Talinz to look as authentic as possible. Some, it could be said, might even desire some of the social awkwardness that comes with that.
Outside of domicile servants, cafes and restaurants staffed entirely by Talinz units, or staffed with a mix of human and human-like Talinz, have become quite popular. Some more upmarket outlets might even purchase ‘skin models’ – skin-like polymer coverings constructed from images of an individual to create a perfect likeness – and challenge customers to guess whether they are being served by a human, or a robot.
Such an industry has created a hotbed for crime, however. Police can often be taxed by bodies that look lifelike until they sit under autopsy. Life insurance companies have been pressuring to shore up regulations after a number of seemingly cut and dry deaths resulted in huge payouts, only for it to turn out that a remarkably lifelike decoy had been placed in the individual’s stead.
Two years ago, workers at the Metropolitan Police department found a body so badly disfigured that any attempts to identify it were notably hindered. Police scrambled to find the killer, but couldn’t seem to find an appropriate dead or missing individual by any of the records they had. When the killer was found, it was more by luck and chance than anything else. When a few inopportune statements were made at a dinner party, a swift smack to a seemingly-human jaw revealed a Talinz frame beneath a low quality, thin skin-model. Tobias Moore, the killer, it occurred, had murdered his partner in a fit of rage after an argument that resulted in the other attempting to end the relationship. In the following week, Tobias, a Talinz technician by trade, used the body to construct his own frame from scratch, with his partner as the model, before dumping what remained in the Thames to attempt to clear away the evidence. He had rebuilt his partner’s memory using their social media profiles, recent internet purchases and search histories, supplemented by a few recordings of calls they had made. It was capable of interpolating from recent events to give the illusion of memory, and easily gathered from records of school friends and connected media a number of useful recollections of the victim’s life before they met Tobias.
It took 18 months to find him. None of their closest friends had noticed.

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