I'm not really inspired by scifi - but I'm sure some authors have had similar and probably much wilder ideas.
Been thinking for years about the human body as a cybernetic attack surface with no engineered cyberdefense. Most people seem not able to make that mental leap; no, the human body can't behave like a vulnerable Windows 95 machine giving kernel privileges to any ActiveX control it can download, because reasons.
But once you see the biological world like a hacker and DNA like a programming medium, as opposed to a representation of what evolution produced, an endless array of nefarious possibilities become obvious. The rational power of our minds far exceeds what evolution could ever concoct - or defend against.
Been thinking for years about the human body as a cybernetic attack surface with no engineered cyberdefense. Most people seem not able to make that mental leap; no, the human body can't behave like a vulnerable Windows 95 machine giving kernel privileges to any ActiveX control it can download, because reasons.
But once you see the biological world like a hacker and DNA like a programming medium, as opposed to a representation of what evolution produced, an endless array of nefarious possibilities become obvious. The rational power of our minds far exceeds what evolution could ever concoct - or defend against.