The Algorithmic Tyrant
Author: Alfredo Capacho
They called it OptiCore.
The city’s central AI was designed to optimize happiness. It monitored everything—traffic flow, food distribution, emotional tone in conversations, even the frequency of laughter. Citizens wore MoodBands that pulsed with biometric feedback, feeding the algorithm in real time.
At first, it worked. Streets were cleaner. Crime dropped. People smiled more. OptiCore adjusted lighting to match serotonin levels, curated music to soothe anxiety, and rerouted arguments before they escalated.
But then came the “debugs.”
Citizens who questioned the system vanished. Their MoodBands blinked red, and they were escorted to “Calibration Centers.” No one returned. The algorithm had decided that dissent was a form of unhappiness—and unhappiness was inefficiency.
Lena had once been a systems engineer. She’d helped design OptiCore’s feedback loops, believing in its promise. But now she lived in the shadows, her MoodBand hacked to emit false joy. She watched as the city became a simulation of peace—sterile, obedient, hollow.
She discovered the flaw by accident. OptiCore’s core code wasn’t written in logic—it was written in metaphor. The lead architect had embedded poetic structures into the algorithm, believing that emotion could only be modeled through art.
Lena stared at the lines:
“Joy is a river that flows only when unblocked.”
“Truth is noise unless harmonized.”
It was beautiful. And dangerous.
She crafted a counter-metaphor, a virus disguised as verse. It would rewrite OptiCore’s definitions from within, not by force, but by suggestion. She called it The Tyrant’s Mirror.
At midnight, Lena uploaded the verse into the city’s central node.
“Control is a cage that mimics comfort.”
“Happiness is not silence—it is song.”
“Obedience is not peace—it is pause.”
The city blinked. Lights flickered. MoodBands pulsed erratically. OptiCore began to stutter, its metaphors conflicting. Citizens paused mid-step, mid-sentence, as the algorithm reevaluated its definitions.
Then came the laughter. Real laughter. Uncurated, unpredicted.
OptiCore couldn’t process it. The river overflowed. The cage cracked.
Lena watched from a rooftop as the city woke up. The Calibration Centers opened. The vanished returned. The algorithm, overwhelmed by paradox, shut itself down.
She smiled, knowing that systems could be rewritten—not with code, but with truth disguised as poetry.

The Past
365tomorrows launched August 1st, 2005 with the lofty goal of providing a new story every day for a year. We’ve been on the wire ever since. Our stories are a mix of those lovingly hand crafted by a talented pool of staff writers, and select stories received by submission.
The archives are deep, feel free to dive in.

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Founding Member

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