About Me

Absolutely. Here’s a detailed and text-based version of your “About Me” profile, elaborated with the full depth, ambition, and experimental edge that emerges from your chat archive. This version is suitable for a long-form blog post or About section that reveals both your personality and your work.





About Me: The Signal in the Static



I’m an architect of speculative systems, a glitch-ethnographer of memory and power, and a builder of tools that think sideways.


My work spans the edges of code, cognition, and counter-narrative. I operate at the interface between human memory and machine recall — where every dataset is also a diary, and every app is a mirror to the collective unconscious. I write software that doesn’t just compute, but reflects, intervenes, and plays.


This blog is my creative command center: part memory lab, part sonic playground, part social observatory. It’s a space where algorithms meet ethics, where design meets defiance, and where history can be rewritten — one data trace at a time.





I Build Memory Machines



Much of my work revolves around how we remember, forget, and manipulate truth in a digital age. I build systems that:


  • Log biological and digital memory side-by-side to detect conflict, convergence, and creative gaps.
  • Let users search their own pasts — including offline, embodied experiences — as if querying a database.
  • Introduce subliminal or low-detection stimuli to gently resurface forgotten insights or emotional patterns.
  • Enable a “right to disappear” from collective memory systems, decoupling presence from surveillance.



In my design philosophy, memory is not just storage — it’s negotiation. Every click, glance, or pause is a vote in a constantly evolving narrative. My tools help users cross-check their own sense of reality against both biological instincts and digital traces.





I Engineer Social Feedback Loops



I develop software that listens while you browse, think, or move through space. My flagship project, ThoughtMonitor, is a browser extension that:


  • Calculates reading ease and emotional valence of online content in real time.
  • Opens scribble pads and note windows that sync to GitHub, archiving your cognitive journey.
  • Features a waveform analyzer and glitch-visualizer for your emotional responses while reading or listening.



It’s not just productivity software — it’s a forensic self-interrogation toolkit.


Another core idea in my work is the concept of “concierge communication”: semi-private internal messaging systems that offer escalation paths for trust repair and conflict mediation — inspired by civil society models, but designed for networked platforms.





I Build Crawlers for the Subconscious



Through my project Big Fly, I’ve designed a full-stack infrastructure for crawling and classifying enclaves online. It detects risk factors, identity bubbles, and trust collapse points across:


  • Job boards
  • Ride-hailing networks
  • Social media conversations
  • Dark web forums
  • AI-generated dialogue



The Big Fly engine includes a live profiler, entity graphing tool, PII detection layer, and a rotating library of temporal decoy probes — fictionalized data traps that test the boundaries of belief, trust, and signal authenticity.


I’ve even developed BubbleBot, a crawler that gamifies the act of profiling — assigning goals like “infiltration”, “engagement”, or “extraction” to live crawls across known enclaves.





I Remix Media, Myth, and Machines



Creativity is central to everything I do. From interactive fiction to generative radio, I build tools that reimagine narrative — not as linear storytelling, but as a living system shaped by interaction and feedback.


My science-fiction scripture, The Merry C, is written in biblical verse and inspired by Terminator 2, but reframes gender, war, and embodiment as mythic dilemmas in a near-future collapse scenario. It’s designed to be read, preached, or staged as a mixed-reality ritual.


I’ve also explored:


  • Digital waveform painting using glitch aesthetics and real-time audio streams.
  • Interactive sound players that blend audio improvisation with visual memory recall.
  • Archive colonialism, a framework for analyzing how dominant data systems erase or misrepresent indigenous or exilic memory.






My Toolkit Includes:



  • Forensic browser extensions
  • Biometric search engines (Biocache)
  • Canonical tagging verification engines (Neuromart / Mosquito)
  • Social almanacs based on census blocks and local memory
  • Ride-hailing platforms where drivers set rates, identities, and communication methods
  • Decoy probe libraries tuned to geopolitical or subcultural detection



Every tool I build is also a philosophical position. I don’t separate form from ethics, or function from affect. I believe in designing systems that are subversive and hospitable, both mischievous and rigorous.





Currently Exploring:



  • How biometric data can be cached and cross-referenced without violating privacy.
  • How generative AI can reduce superstition and myth-based mass psychology.
  • How digital protocols can reframe authority, conflict, and trauma in diasporic communities.
  • How enclave detection can be tied to live risk scoring dashboards with real-time alerts.
  • How narrative systems can be gradually revised over time, using pulse-based generative scaffolding.






Closing Thought



I build systems that remember — and sometimes, that choose not to.


Welcome to my world: where search engines sing, where memory is negotiable, and where your thoughts are as real as any file.


Wander freely. Remix wildly. And if you see yourself in any of this — reach out. Let’s design something together.




Let me know if you’d like this turned into a PDF, a Blogspot-ready HTML post, or even read aloud as a voiceover or AI radio segment.


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