To be "I.Cyborg.rar" is to live in a state of perpetual readiness—waiting to be transmitted, shared, or stored. While compression allows us to traverse the global network with ease, we must ask if the "self" that remains after extraction is the same one that was originally archived.
Stripping away "redundant" biological nuances to fit into platform-specific constraints (e.g., social media profiles).
Collecting disparate parts of a digital life into a single unit. I.Cyborg.rar
When the "I.Cyborg.rar" is opened in the wrong environment (e.g., a professional setting vs. a private one), the resulting decompression can lead to social friction.
The protective layers of digital personas that hide the "raw" data of the self. 2. Lossy vs. Lossless: What Do We Leave Behind? To be "I
Just as a RAR file reduces file size, digital platforms reduce personality to algorithms. We discuss the "artifacts" left behind—the nuances of human emotion that cannot be translated into binary.
The pressure to be "efficient" data translates into a curated identity that prioritizes speed of consumption over depth of being. Collecting disparate parts of a digital life into
In an era of ubiquitous data, the human experience is increasingly subjected to "lossy" and "lossless" compression. This paper introduces the concept of "I.Cyborg.rar"—a metaphorical file format representing the modern individual who exists as a curated, compressed, and encrypted set of data points. We examine how the transition from biological "analog" life to digital "archived" existence alters our perception of memory, privacy, and the self.