2026-03-09 17:18:56
Humanity has achieved something historically unprecedented: it has constructed the most sophisticated cage ever devised, decorated it with infinite scrolling and dopamine-triggering notifications, and voluntarily imprisoned itself within it — celebrating every new feature as liberation while surrendering the last remnants of digital sovereignty with every click.
\ The internet — that magnificent, anarchic, boundless frontier of human imagination — has been systematically dismembered, consolidated, and weaponized by a handful of corporations whose market capitalizations exceed the GDP of entire continents. We did not stumble into this dystopia accidentally. We were seduced into it, one free service at a time, until the price of convenience became our autonomy, our privacy, and ultimately, our freedom.
\ The decentralized internet is not merely a technological alternative. It is an act of civilizational self-preservation.
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The original architects of the internet — Vint Cerf, Tim Berners-Lee, and the visionary engineers of ARPANET — did not design a system of centralized control. They designed a resilient, distributed network specifically engineered to survive nuclear strikes by routing information around damaged nodes. The fundamental philosophy was radical in its simplicity: no single point of failure, no single point of control, no single point of corruption.
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That philosophy has been catastrophically betrayed.
\ Today, five corporations — Google, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and Apple — exercise dominion over approximately 72% of global internet infrastructure, cloud computing, and digital communication. A single Amazon Web Services outage in 2021 crippled thousands of websites, applications, and critical services simultaneously, exposing the terrifying fragility of a world built upon centralized foundations. When the pillar cracks, the entire cathedral collapses.
\ This is not an engineering oversight. This is the predictable, inevitable consequence of allowing profit motive to override architectural principle. Centralization is extraordinarily efficient for generating shareholder value. It is catastrophically dangerous for human freedom.
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To understand why decentralization is existentially necessary, one must first understand what centralized internet infrastructure actually does beneath its polished interface.
\ Every centralized platform operates on a deceptively simple economic model: the user is not the customer. The user is the product. Every search query you submit to Google is a behavioral data point. Every post you publish on Meta's platforms is a psychological profile update. Every purchase you make through Amazon's ecosystem is a consumer behavior signal fed into predictive algorithms of staggering sophistication.The surveillance economy has achieved what totalitarian regimes of the twentieth century could only dream of: voluntary, enthusiastic, and continuous self-reporting by billions of individuals who genuinely believe they are merely sharing photographs of their lunch.
\ Shoshana Zuboff, in her landmark work on surveillance capitalism, describes this phenomenon as the unilateral claiming of private human experience as free raw material for behavioral prediction products. The centralized internet is not a communication tool that happens to collect data. It is a data extraction apparatus that offers communication as a pretext.
\ Decentralization obliterates this model at its architectural root. When data is distributed across peer-to-peer networks, when identity is managed through self-sovereign cryptographic keys rather than corporate accounts, and when communication occurs through censorship-resistant protocols, there is no central repository to mine, no single database to subpoena, no corporate intermediary to coerce.
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The emergence of blockchain technology represents the most significant architectural development in internet infrastructure since the invention of TCP/IP itself. It provides something that centralized systems are constitutionally incapable of providing: trustless, permissionless, censorship-resistant coordination at a global scale.
\ The InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) replaces the fragile, location-dependent addressing of the traditional web with content-based addressing — a paradigm shift of profound consequence. In the traditional web, a URL points to a location where content is stored. If that location is taken offline, the content vanishes. In IPFS, content is addressed by its cryptographic fingerprint — what it IS, not where it resides. Content cannot be unpublished, cannot be censored, cannot be erased by corporate decree or governmental order.
\ Ethereum Name Service transforms domain ownership from a revocable license granted by centralized registries into immutable, blockchain-verified property rights. When your domain exists on a blockchain, no government can seize it, no corporation can suspend it, and no algorithm can bury it.
\ Protocols like Filecoin, Arweave, and Storj distribute data storage across thousands of independent nodes globally, making the concept of "taking down" content as operationally absurd as attempting to remove a color from the visible spectrum.
\ These are not theoretical constructs debated in academic papers. They are functioning, deployed, battle-tested systems quietly constructing a parallel internet beneath the surface of the visible web — an internet that operates by mathematical law rather than corporate policy.
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The centralized internet has become the preferred instrument of authoritarian control in the twenty-first century. The Great Firewall of China, Iran's National Information Network, Russia's sovereign internet legislation — these are not aberrations. They are the logical culmination of centralized internet architecture applied by states that have correctly identified the kill switch and are not hesitant to use it.
\ When an entire nation's internet traffic flows through centralized infrastructure controlled by entities subject to governmental authority, censorship requires nothing more than a single directive. Ethiopia shut down its internet during political unrest. India has suspended internet access over 550 times since 2012 — more than any other democracy on Earth. Myanmar's military junta disabled social media platforms within hours of seizing power.
\ Each of these acts of digital violence was made possible — indeed, was made trivially easy — by centralized architecture.A genuinely decentralized internet renders these interventions technically futile. You cannot block a blockchain. You cannot shut down a peer-to-peer network by targeting a single node. You cannot censor content that exists simultaneously across thousands of nodes distributed across dozens of jurisdictions. Decentralization is not merely a technical preference — it is a geopolitical shield against the creeping authoritarianism of both state and corporate power.
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Beyond the philosophical imperatives of freedom and the geopolitical arguments for resilience, the decentralized internet represents an economic paradigm of extraordinary potential.
\ The creator economy of the centralized web is defined by brutal asymmetry. A content creator generating millions of views on YouTube receives approximately 55% of advertising revenue, after YouTube extracts its 45% for the privilege of hosting content on its platform. A musician streaming on Spotify receives less than half a cent per stream. A writer publishing on a centralized platform builds an audience that belongs to the platform, not to the writer. The moment the platform changes its algorithm, suspends the account, or ceases operations, the creator's livelihood evaporates.
\ Web3 protocols dissolve this asymmetry entirely. Smart contracts enable direct, trustless transactions between creators and audiences with no intermediary extracting rent. NFTs transform digital content into verifiable, tradeable assets whose value accrues to their creators. Decentralized autonomous organizations enable communities to govern shared resources democratically, without corporate boards or venture capitalists extracting value from the periphery.
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The decentralized internet does not merely redistribute power. It redistributes economic sovereignty.
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The architects of centralized internet dominance would have you believe that decentralization is a utopian fantasy — technically immature, economically unviable, and socially irrelevant to the billions of users happily consuming content on their platforms. This is precisely what those who benefit most from the current architecture would prefer you to believe.
\ The reality is more electrifying. Ethereum processes billions of dollars in trustless transactions daily. IPFS serves millions of content requests. Decentralized finance protocols manage hundreds of billions in assets without a single bank, broker, or regulatory intermediary. The Brave browser pays its users in cryptocurrency for their attention rather than selling that attention to advertisers. The decentralized internet is not approaching. It is already here, expanding silently beneath the surface of a centralized web that is beginning to show the cracks of its own contradictions.
\ History has a recurring pattern: every system that concentrates power absolutely eventually generates the conditions of its own disruption. The centralized internet is no exception. The question confronting each individual, each developer, each policymaker, and each citizen of the digital age is not whether decentralization will triumph. The mathematics makes that inevitable. The question is whether you will be among those who understood what was at stake before the walls came down — or among those who only recognized the cage after someone else had already opened the door.
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The rebellion has already begun. The only question remaining is which side of history you intend to occupy.
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2026-03-09 17:12:11
Product teams spend enormous energy getting to launch. We know the drill—roadmaps debated for weeks, specs refined until everyone’s sick of looking at them, designs polished to pixel-perfect precision. Metrics get defined, redefined, and argued over. Finally, you ship, and the whole team exhales.
That’s usually when the real work should start.
Because the hardest part of product management isn’t shipping. It’s listening honestly to what happens after—and being willing to act on what you hear, even when it’s uncomfortable.
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Every launch is a bet. We dress it up as a strategy. We back it with data. But in practice, it’s still a hypothesis: we believe customers will use this in the way we expect, at the scale we anticipate, with acceptable tradeoffs.
Sometimes that holds. Often, reality pushes back.
Customers adopt unevenly. They use the edges of your feature, not the center. They ignore the “hero” scenario you demo’d at launch and jury-rig the product into existing workflows in ways you never anticipated.
That’s not failure. That’s a signal.
The mistake I see teams make after launch is assuming that any adoption validates the direction. It doesn’t.
I’ve watched features with respectable usage numbers still create:
In those cases, customers weren’t asking for more capability. They were asking for predictability and simplicity.
And those requests don’t always show up cleanly in dashboards. They show up as hesitation. As support tickets with a certain tone. As features people technically use—but don’t quite trust.
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You can see this dynamic in how large platforms behave after shipping ambitious ideas.
Look at what Microsoft has been doing with Windows lately. Some features that looked bold on paper and impressive in demos have quietly been walked back after real-world use introduced more friction than value.
No big announcements; No long blog posts explaining the rationale. \n They just… simplified.
What matters here isn’t any single feature decision. It’s the mindset: launching doesn’t entitle a feature to permanence.
If something doesn’t earn its place in a customer’s daily workflow—or worse, erodes trust—it shouldn’t be protected just because it was expensive to build or aligned with someone’s vision.
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I remember shipping a feature I was genuinely proud of. We’d spent months on it. The engineering was solid. The design was thoughtful. Internal reviews went great. I expected customers to love it. Instead, what we got wasn’t expected more like lower adoption, confused support tickets and a steady stream of people asking how to turn it off.
Again adoption was low, the numbers weren’t that terrible. But friction kept appearing in places we hadn’t anticipated:
So we scaled it back. Reduced its footprint. Made it quieter and more opt-in. Nothing flashy happened after that, fewer tickets, fewer escalations and noticeably more confidence using the rest of the product.
Customers didn’t mourn the change, they relaxed.
That told me everything I needed to know.
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There’s a difference between flailing and responding.
Flailing ignores the signal and chases novelty, whereas responding is anchored in observed behavior.
The best teams I’ve worked with:
This matters even more for products that sit close to operating systems, personal data, or daily workflows.
When trust is involved, less is often the right answer—even when it’s a harder sell internally.
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Look for where users hesitate, where defaults get changed immediately. Where features are avoided rather than embraced—even when they’re technically “successful” by usage metrics.
Those moments aren’t rejection. \n They’re guidance—if you’re paying attention.
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Shipping is the baseline. Anyone can push code to production.
What separates good product management from mediocre is what happens after launch:
The best products aren’t the ones that do the most. They’re the ones that consistently choose what matters to the customer—and have the courage to let everything else go.
2026-03-09 17:05:20
When I was a kid, my mom gave me a stack of her work papers and asked me to enter the data into Excel. Back then, to optimize the process, I taught myself to type without looking at the keyboard. Don’t laugh! People used to pay for such courses!
Now, 15 years later, optimization feels impossible without the AI, whose abilities seem endless: writing, coding, calculating, analyzing, and perhaps, even taking on roles once reserved for humans? The Ahrefs team ran research in April 2025 and discovered that out of 900,000 newly created web pages, a whopping 74.2% contained some form of AI-generated content. Nearly three out of every four new pages online are already touched by AI.
Seriously, where was this tech when I was staring at a blank page at 2 a.m. as a student?
AI is changing the way content is created, but optimization has always been about the same thing: reducing friction, saving time, and making work more organized. And that goes far beyond writing text with a prompt.
Okay, enough nostalgia. Back to optimizing.
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I had a process, and it needed tracking.
I am still a huge fan of Google Sheets. Add a few formulas for speed, tabs for sanity, folders for order, and store everything safely on Google Drive for a good night’s sleep. It is not perfect, but it keeps you moving and helps uncover new ways to optimize your workflow.
Sometimes, optimization does not start with expensive tools. It starts with structure.
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Optimization is not only about AI. \n It’s also about the way you choose to approach the work.
Checklists for daily tasks and clear workflows for preventing teams from reinventing the wheel every single time.
Honestly, I used to think Jira was just for engineers, while marketers stuck to Notion or Asana. Turns out, I was wrong. Jira can actually bring everyone together, including marketing, engineering, HR, and finance, so teams work from the same workspace and deliver results side by side.
Let’s be real. Nobody is surprised by a checklist these days. But when it comes to work, having one is still a true lifesaver. A checklist breaks complex tasks into clear, manageable steps, and everyone can instantly see what is done and what is still in progress.
I have had to build many work-related processes from scratch, from tracking systems and clear guidelines to keyword research, rankings, guest posting workflows, competitive analysis, content prioritization, SEO audits, and campaign launches. Checklists made it possible to organize every step, assign ownership, and keep the entire team aligned in real time.
\
Okay, I downloaded Arc.
Two and a half years ago, I switched from Chrome to Arc. Even though this browser is built on Chromium, it completely changed my perspective on what a browser could be. The moment you start using Arc, you cannot help but talk about it to everyone.
This browser gives you the ability to organize your work in a genuinely thoughtful way. I have dedicated spaces for different projects and roles such as Sales, SEO, and Partnerships. Working on keyword research using the Split View inside the browser – omg, it’s a true time saver.
Arc reminded me that optimization is not always about doing more. Sometimes, it is about seeing your work more clearly, and honestly, and this browser really helps with that.
Since Arc is now part of Atlassian, I am not sure what to expect next. Maybe it is time to research alternatives, but that might be a topic for the next article.
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Optimization today is not about choosing between AI and humans. It is about making them work better together. As AI becomes deeply integrated in content creation, I started recently using an AI detector for a very simple reason: I want to be prepared for the moment when search engines will start getting stricter about AI-generated content. Also, when I research domains for collaboration, I always quickly check their blogs for “human‑written content”, because It quickly shows me whether they actually care about publishing good content or just treat it as a checkbox.
However, optimization is not about replacing creativity. It is about improving how we use our time, tools, and thinking. And no matter how advanced the workflow gets, there will always be room for optimization.
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Optimization is rarely about one breakthrough tool or perfect system. It is a habit built through small improvements, honest reflection, and a willingness to rethink how work gets done. AI has become a powerful part of that process, but it works best when paired with clear systems, thoughtful workflows, and human judgment.
Whether it is a checklist, a spreadsheet, a browser setup, or an AI-assisted draft, the real value comes from using tools with intention. The tools will keep changing, but the mindset stays the same. Stay curious, stay practical, and keep optimizing.
2026-03-09 17:00:37
Architectural Designer and AI researcher Samuvel Benhursha is formalizing a constraint-first workflow for AI-assisted architectural transformation, validated through peer-reviewed publication, invited teaching, competition recognition, and public exhibitions.
Generative AI can now produce architectural imagery in seconds. A few words, a reference image, and an algorithm will deliver a dramatic skyline, a futuristic museum, or a reimagined temple glowing at sunset. The results are often visually striking. But speed has a side effect: it can flatten the layered obligations that make architecture more than image—hierarchy, climatic intelligence, structural reasoning, and cultural memory.
Over the past two years, architectural designer and independent AI researcher Samuvel Benhursha has been developing a different posture toward generative systems. Rather than beginning with prompts, he begins with architecture. In his view, generative AI should not replace architectural thinking; it should follow it. The model is not the origin of the design process but the final translator in a disciplined chain of constraints that can be articulated, measured, and repeated.
That position is articulated most formally in a 2025 IEEE conference proceeding titled “Transformation of Traditional Architecture Design into Timeless Architecture Designs through Generative Adversarial Networks,” listed with DOI 10.1109/ICCAMS65118.2025.11233879 and tied to ICCAMS proceedings. The research reframes “traditional-to-timeless” transformation not as stylistic remixing, but as a structured computational process. Cultural references are not aesthetic ornaments; they are encoded parameters. Modern performance expectations—clarity of form, environmental responsiveness, spatial sequencing—are introduced deliberately rather than visually implied.
At the algorithmic level, the research employs Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs)—the adversarial learning paradigm in which a generator and discriminator iteratively refine outputs against one another. Rather than using GANs as engines of visual novelty, the framework embeds architectural constraints directly within that adversarial structure. Architectural elements are translated into computational feature representations before transformation, allowing identity to be preserved while performance conditions evolve.
The paper’s validation section references PSNR, SSIM, and RMSE—metrics more commonly associated with imaging and signal reconstruction. The numbers themselves are not presented as spectacle. Their presence signals something quieter: an attempt to shift architectural AI from novelty toward accountability. If transformation cannot be compared across iterations, it cannot be refined responsibly. By embedding quantifiable similarity and reconstruction metrics into architectural experimentation, the work suggests that generative transformation can be evaluated as a measurable computational process rather than celebrated as stylistic surprise. In an era where building performance and climate responsiveness are increasingly urgent concerns, disciplined transformation methods carry implications beyond aesthetics.
An independent technical evaluation written in early 2026 reinforces that interpretation. Techjays CEO Philip Clements Samuelraj notes that “controlled parameter integration within generative modeling is not commonly formalized in applied design research,” and further describes the framework as clearly structuring architectural transformation as a measurable computational process. The emphasis is not on aesthetic preference, but on procedural clarity and methodological formalization.
The research has also moved beyond publication into academic dialogue. In February 2026, Mohamed Sathak A.J. Academy of Architecture in Chennai invited Benhursha to deliver an official virtual guest lecture based on his IEEE research. The session addressed generative AI in architectural transformation, climate-responsive reinterpretation of traditional elements, and the integration of computational design methods into contemporary architectural thinking. The invitation demonstrates that the research has been recognized as a structured and transferable methodology suitable for academic discourse.
If the IEEE paper establishes a scholarly base, Benhursha’s broader practice translates that base into a procedural workflow he calls “A Generative Framework Integrating Form, Landscape, and Cultural Time.” The framework rejects prompt-first image making. Instead, it requires a sequence of architectural commitments before any visual generation occurs.
The process begins with narrative intent and socio-cultural program. It then establishes an ecological–architectural polarity—whether architecture behaves as ecosystem, whether landscape is embedded within structure, or whether built form dissolves into terrain. Landscape context and atmospheric temporality follow: season, weather, light conditions, and geographic identity. Historical constraints and typological clarity are defined before a single image is generated. An anchor element is introduced and evaluated through a structured design lens addressing compositional coherence and spatial emphasis. Materials, cinematic viewing strategy, and layered narrative structure are encoded before the workflow moves into generation and narrative calibration.
In this structure, generative AI becomes a rendering engine for prior reasoning. The workflow insists that architectural identity precede visual amplification. Outputs are not isolated frames but expressions of a constrained system that integrates form, landscape, and cultural time.The framework has been implemented in professional architectural practice, including integration into applied design workflows.
Beyond research and exhibition contexts, Benhursha’s architectural experience grounds this methodology in built practice. He previously worked at Solomon Cordwell Buenz (SCB), where he applied AI-informed workflows during the development of projects such as 533 Kirkham, integrating computational experimentation into real-world architectural coordination. He is currently part of the AI development committee at Jensen Architects, where he contributes to internal research initiatives and explores the incorporation of constraint-first AI methodologies into office-wide design workflows. This professional engagement positions his work not only as theoretical research, but as an evolving framework tested within active architectural production environments.
Public recognition of this approach has appeared in competitive and exhibition contexts. In the Arch Hive AI Architecture Competition 2023 themed “Artificial Nature,” Amazing Architecture lists Benhursha as Third Place winner for “Journeying through the Nexus of Aquatic Futurism, Paleobiology, Marine Life, and Ecological Consciousness.” Jury commentary described the project as translating deep marine imagination into a coherent architectural language across massing, façade articulation, and visitor sequencing—indicating evaluation of spatial logic rather than surface novelty.
Technology media has also intersected with the research trajectory. A 2025 TechBullion article by Samuvel Benhursha, “Can Buildings Think? – Rethinking Space, Movement, and Crowd,” explores adaptive architecture in which sensing systems and AI-driven analysis inform responsive spatial strategies.

The argument situates generative AI within a broader conversation about buildings that sense occupancy, respond to environmental change, and evolve as intelligent spatial systems.
In 2024, Benhursha was also invited to serve as a juror for the Arch Hive International Architectural Visualization Competition, reflecting peer recognition of his expertise in AI- integrated architectural methodologies.
His research and design philosophy have further been featured in Architectural Digest in the contributor piece “Making Buildings Talk: The AI-Powered Transformation of the Urban Environment,” where he discusses how AI can extend beyond image production to influence adaptive, communicative urban systems.
Exhibitions have brought the imagery to public audiences outside professional journals. Visual Art Journal’s “Seventh Times Square Billboard Showcase” in October 2025 listed Benhursha among featured artists whose works appeared on Times Square screens. In Seoul, Art Innovation Gallery’s “AFTERGLOW” exhibition at Parnas Media Tower presented large-scale digital works in a billboard format. During Miami Art Week 2025, the “Mi Ami” floating LED installation curated by Art Innovation Gallery navigated between Miami Beach and Downtown Miami, with Benhursha included on the roster of participating artists.
He also presented a solo exhibition in Athens in collaboration with Arrival Gallery, further expanding his international curatorial presence. In each setting, AI-generated architectural imagery was presented at urban scale, situating experimental methodology within civic visual culture. He was directly invited for gallery exhibitions in London, Milan, and Brighton.
Parallel to academic and exhibition recognition is an unusually large digital audience. Benhursha’s public Instagram profile indicates more than 850k followers, an audience size more typical of media platforms than individual architects and a sustained monthly reach exceeding one million views. His audience includes several internationally recognized architecture studios and global design publications, reflecting peer-level engagement beyond general public visibility.Independent features in Digital Arts Blog and Visual Art Journal describe a practice that merges professional architectural training with generative experimentation. The scale of engagement suggests sustained public interest in architectural storytelling when it is grounded in coherent rules of form, landscape logic, and cultural time.
For architecture, the central question is no longer whether generative tools will be used. They are already embedded in practice. The more consequential question is whether AI will amplify architecture’s responsibilities—or quietly bypass them. Benhursha’s body of work proposes a directional answer: begin with constraints, encode cultural and environmental logic, and allow generative systems to operate downstream of architectural reasoning. In that model, AI-assisted design becomes something that can be reviewed, debated, taught, and iteratively improved— not merely consumed as accelerated content.
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:::tip This story was distributed as a release by Jon Stojan under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program.
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2026-03-09 17:00:27
:::info Astounding Stories of Super-Science October, 1994, by Astounding Stories is part of HackerNoon’s Book Blog Post series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here. The Picture of Dorian Gray - Chapter XIII
\ By Oscar Wilde
:::
\ He passed out of the room and began the ascent, Basil Hallward following close behind. They walked softly, as men do instinctively at night. The lamp cast fantastic shadows on the wall and staircase. A rising wind made some of the windows rattle.
When they reached the top landing, Dorian set the lamp down on the floor, and taking out the key, turned it in the lock. “You insist on knowing, Basil?” he asked in a low voice.
“Yes.”
“I am delighted,” he answered, smiling. Then he added, somewhat harshly, “You are the one man in the world who is entitled to know everything about me. You have had more to do with my life than you think”; and, taking up the lamp, he opened the door and went in. A cold current of air passed them, and the light shot up for a moment in a flame of murky orange. He shuddered. “Shut the door behind you,” he whispered, as he placed the lamp on the table.
Hallward glanced round him with a puzzled expression. The room looked as if it had not been lived in for years. A faded Flemish tapestry, a curtained picture, an old Italian cassone, and an almost empty book-case—that was all that it seemed to contain, besides a chair and a table. As Dorian Gray was lighting a half-burned candle that was standing on the mantelshelf, he saw that the whole place was covered with dust and that the carpet was in holes. A mouse ran scuffling behind the wainscoting. There was a damp odour of mildew.
“So you think that it is only God who sees the soul, Basil? Draw that curtain back, and you will see mine.”
The voice that spoke was cold and cruel. “You are mad, Dorian, or playing a part,” muttered Hallward, frowning.
“You won’t? Then I must do it myself,” said the young man, and he tore the curtain from its rod and flung it on the ground.
An exclamation of horror broke from the painter’s lips as he saw in the dim light the hideous face on the canvas grinning at him. There was something in its expression that filled him with disgust and loathing. Good heavens! it was Dorian Gray’s own face that he was looking at! The horror, whatever it was, had not yet entirely spoiled that marvellous beauty. There was still some gold in the thinning hair and some scarlet on the sensual mouth. The sodden eyes had kept something of the loveliness of their blue, the noble curves had not yet completely passed away from chiselled nostrils and from plastic throat. Yes, it was Dorian himself. But who had done it? He seemed to recognize his own brushwork, and the frame was his own design. The idea was monstrous, yet he felt afraid. He seized the lighted candle, and held it to the picture. In the left-hand corner was his own name, traced in long letters of bright vermilion.
It was some foul parody, some infamous ignoble satire. He had never done that. Still, it was his own picture. He knew it, and he felt as if his blood had changed in a moment from fire to sluggish ice. His own picture! What did it mean? Why had it altered? He turned and looked at Dorian Gray with the eyes of a sick man. His mouth twitched, and his parched tongue seemed unable to articulate. He passed his hand across his forehead. It was dank with clammy sweat.
The young man was leaning against the mantelshelf, watching him with that strange expression that one sees on the faces of those who are absorbed in a play when some great artist is acting. There was neither real sorrow in it nor real joy. There was simply the passion of the spectator, with perhaps a flicker of triumph in his eyes. He had taken the flower out of his coat, and was smelling it, or pretending to do so.
“What does this mean?” cried Hallward, at last. His own voice sounded shrill and curious in his ears.
“Years ago, when I was a boy,” said Dorian Gray, crushing the flower in his hand, “you met me, flattered me, and taught me to be vain of my good looks. One day you introduced me to a friend of yours, who explained to me the wonder of youth, and you finished a portrait of me that revealed to me the wonder of beauty. In a mad moment that, even now, I don’t know whether I regret or not, I made a wish, perhaps you would call it a prayer….”
“I remember it! Oh, how well I remember it! No! the thing is impossible. The room is damp. Mildew has got into the canvas. The paints I used had some wretched mineral poison in them. I tell you the thing is impossible.”
“Ah, what is impossible?” murmured the young man, going over to the window and leaning his forehead against the cold, mist-stained glass.
“You told me you had destroyed it.”
“I was wrong. It has destroyed me.”
“I don’t believe it is my picture.”
“Can’t you see your ideal in it?” said Dorian bitterly.
“My ideal, as you call it…”
“As you called it.”
“There was nothing evil in it, nothing shameful. You were to me such an ideal as I shall never meet again. This is the face of a satyr.”
“It is the face of my soul.”
“Christ! what a thing I must have worshipped! It has the eyes of a devil.”
“Each of us has heaven and hell in him, Basil,” cried Dorian with a wild gesture of despair.
Hallward turned again to the portrait and gazed at it. “My God! If it is true,” he exclaimed, “and this is what you have done with your life, why, you must be worse even than those who talk against you fancy you to be!” He held the light up again to the canvas and examined it. The surface seemed to be quite undisturbed and as he had left it. It was from within, apparently, that the foulness and horror had come. Through some strange quickening of inner life the leprosies of sin were slowly eating the thing away. The rotting of a corpse in a watery grave was not so fearful.
His hand shook, and the candle fell from its socket on the floor and lay there sputtering. He placed his foot on it and put it out. Then he flung himself into the rickety chair that was standing by the table and buried his face in his hands.
“Good God, Dorian, what a lesson! What an awful lesson!” There was no answer, but he could hear the young man sobbing at the window. “Pray, Dorian, pray,” he murmured. “What is it that one was taught to say in one’s boyhood? ‘Lead us not into temptation. Forgive us our sins. Wash away our iniquities.’ Let us say that together. The prayer of your pride has been answered. The prayer of your repentance will be answered also. I worshipped you too much. I am punished for it. You worshipped yourself too much. We are both punished.”
Dorian Gray turned slowly around and looked at him with tear-dimmed eyes. “It is too late, Basil,” he faltered.
“It is never too late, Dorian. Let us kneel down and try if we cannot remember a prayer. Isn’t there a verse somewhere, ‘Though your sins be as scarlet, yet I will make them as white as snow’?”
“Those words mean nothing to me now.”
“Hush! Don’t say that. You have done enough evil in your life. My God! Don’t you see that accursed thing leering at us?”
Dorian Gray glanced at the picture, and suddenly an uncontrollable feeling of hatred for Basil Hallward came over him, as though it had been suggested to him by the image on the canvas, whispered into his ear by those grinning lips. The mad passions of a hunted animal stirred within him, and he loathed the man who was seated at the table, more than in his whole life he had ever loathed anything. He glanced wildly around. Something glimmered on the top of the painted chest that faced him. His eye fell on it. He knew what it was. It was a knife that he had brought up, some days before, to cut a piece of cord, and had forgotten to take away with him. He moved slowly towards it, passing Hallward as he did so. As soon as he got behind him, he seized it and turned round. Hallward stirred in his chair as if he was going to rise. He rushed at him and dug the knife into the great vein that is behind the ear, crushing the man’s head down on the table and stabbing again and again.
There was a stifled groan and the horrible sound of some one choking with blood. Three times the outstretched arms shot up convulsively, waving grotesque, stiff-fingered hands in the air. He stabbed him twice more, but the man did not move. Something began to trickle on the floor. He waited for a moment, still pressing the head down. Then he threw the knife on the table, and listened.
He could hear nothing, but the drip, drip on the threadbare carpet. He opened the door and went out on the landing. The house was absolutely quiet. No one was about. For a few seconds he stood bending over the balustrade and peering down into the black seething well of darkness. Then he took out the key and returned to the room, locking himself in as he did so.
The thing was still seated in the chair, straining over the table with bowed head, and humped back, and long fantastic arms. Had it not been for the red jagged tear in the neck and the clotted black pool that was slowly widening on the table, one would have said that the man was simply asleep.
How quickly it had all been done! He felt strangely calm, and walking over to the window, opened it and stepped out on the balcony. The wind had blown the fog away, and the sky was like a monstrous peacock’s tail, starred with myriads of golden eyes. He looked down and saw the policeman going his rounds and flashing the long beam of his lantern on the doors of the silent houses. The crimson spot of a prowling hansom gleamed at the corner and then vanished. A woman in a fluttering shawl was creeping slowly by the railings, staggering as she went. Now and then she stopped and peered back. Once, she began to sing in a hoarse voice. The policeman strolled over and said something to her. She stumbled away, laughing. A bitter blast swept across the square. The gas-lamps flickered and became blue, and the leafless trees shook their black iron branches to and fro. He shivered and went back, closing the window behind him.
Having reached the door, he turned the key and opened it. He did not even glance at the murdered man. He felt that the secret of the whole thing was not to realize the situation. The friend who had painted the fatal portrait to which all his misery had been due had gone out of his life. That was enough.
Then he remembered the lamp. It was a rather curious one of Moorish workmanship, made of dull silver inlaid with arabesques of burnished steel, and studded with coarse turquoises. Perhaps it might be missed by his servant, and questions would be asked. He hesitated for a moment, then he turned back and took it from the table. He could not help seeing the dead thing. How still it was! How horribly white the long hands looked! It was like a dreadful wax image.
Having locked the door behind him, he crept quietly downstairs. The woodwork creaked and seemed to cry out as if in pain. He stopped several times and waited. No: everything was still. It was merely the sound of his own footsteps.
When he reached the library, he saw the bag and coat in the corner. They must be hidden away somewhere. He unlocked a secret press that was in the wainscoting, a press in which he kept his own curious disguises, and put them into it. He could easily burn them afterwards. Then he pulled out his watch. It was twenty minutes to two.
He sat down and began to think. Every year—every month, almost—men were strangled in England for what he had done. There had been a madness of murder in the air. Some red star had come too close to the earth…. And yet, what evidence was there against him? Basil Hallward had left the house at eleven. No one had seen him come in again. Most of the servants were at Selby Royal. His valet had gone to bed…. Paris! Yes. It was to Paris that Basil had gone, and by the midnight train, as he had intended. With his curious reserved habits, it would be months before any suspicions would be roused. Months! Everything could be destroyed long before then.
A sudden thought struck him. He put on his fur coat and hat and went out into the hall. There he paused, hearing the slow heavy tread of the policeman on the pavement outside and seeing the flash of the bull’s-eye reflected in the window. He waited and held his breath.
After a few moments he drew back the latch and slipped out, shutting the door very gently behind him. Then he began ringing the bell. In about five minutes his valet appeared, half-dressed and looking very drowsy.
“I am sorry to have had to wake you up, Francis,” he said, stepping in; “but I had forgotten my latch-key. What time is it?”
“Ten minutes past two, sir,” answered the man, looking at the clock and blinking.
“Ten minutes past two? How horribly late! You must wake me at nine to-morrow. I have some work to do.”
“All right, sir.”
“Did any one call this evening?”
“Mr. Hallward, sir. He stayed here till eleven, and then he went away to catch his train.”
“Oh! I am sorry I didn’t see him. Did he leave any message?”
“No, sir, except that he would write to you from Paris, if he did not find you at the club.”
“That will do, Francis. Don’t forget to call me at nine to-morrow.”
“No, sir.”
The man shambled down the passage in his slippers.
Dorian Gray threw his hat and coat upon the table and passed into the library. For a quarter of an hour he walked up and down the room, biting his lip and thinking. Then he took down the Blue Book from one of the shelves and began to turn over the leaves. “Alan Campbell, 152, Hertford Street, Mayfair.” Yes; that was the man he wanted.
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2026-03-09 16:49:30
Cybersecurity researchers are increasingly raising alarms about a new class of malware powered by artificial intelligence. Unlike traditional malicious software that relies on fixed code and predictable signatures, this new generation can rewrite parts of its own code automatically, allowing it to evolve during an attack and evade many conventional security tools.
\ Traditional malware campaigns usually deploy a single codebase or a limited number of variants. Security systems detect these threats by identifying known patterns such as file hashes, command signatures, or specific behaviors. AI-generated malware, however, can continuously modify its internal structure. Each time the malware spreads to a new machine, it may change its encryption layers, file structure, payload delivery, and execution flow. As a result, no two infections may appear the same.
\ Security analysts say this capability significantly weakens signature-based antivirus systems, which depend on recognizing previously identified malware samples. When the code constantly mutates, those signatures become ineffective almost immediately.
\ Another advanced feature seen in some emerging strains is environmental awareness. Before executing its main payload, the malware can analyze the system it has infected. It may scan for indicators such as virtual machines, debugging tools, sandbox environments, or well-known cybersecurity monitoring software. If it detects that it is being analyzed, the malware may pause execution, remain dormant, or generate harmless behavior to avoid detection. Once it determines the environment is safe, it can activate its full malicious functionality.
\ Researchers also report that AI models are being used to accelerate malware development. Attackers can use generative AI tools to automatically produce multiple code variations, test them against defensive systems, and rapidly deploy the versions that bypass security detection. This dramatically reduces the technical expertise and time previously required to launch sophisticated cyber campaigns.
\ In some experimental scenarios observed in security labs, AI-assisted malware can even adapt after failed attacks. If an intrusion attempt is blocked, the malware may analyze the reason for failure and attempt to modify its approach. This could involve changing network communication patterns, altering privilege escalation techniques, or switching to alternative attack vectors.
\ Industries that manage valuable data or financial assets are considered prime targets. Financial institutions, healthcare networks, government infrastructure, and cryptocurrency platforms hold sensitive data and large amounts of digital value, making them attractive for attackers deploying adaptive malware.
\ Cryptocurrency services are particularly vulnerable because many platforms rely heavily on automated systems and smart contracts. A successful compromise could allow attackers to drain digital wallets, manipulate transactions, or disrupt blockchain infrastructure.
\ To counter these evolving threats, cybersecurity teams are shifting away from purely signature-based defenses and toward behavior-driven detection systems. These systems monitor how programs interact with networks, files, and system processes rather than focusing solely on known malware signatures.
\ Zero-trust security architectures are also gaining adoption. In a zero-trust model, no device or user is automatically trusted, even if they are already inside a network. Every request must be verified continuously, reducing the chances that malware can move laterally across systems once it gains access.
\ Artificial intelligence is also being deployed on the defensive side. AI-powered security platforms can analyze massive volumes of system activity and detect unusual patterns that may indicate a cyberattack. By identifying anomalies rather than specific malware signatures, these systems are better suited to detect constantly changing threats.
\ Despite these advances, security experts warn that the rapid accessibility of AI tools may give attackers a temporary advantage. As generative models become more widely available, cybercriminals can experiment with new attack methods at unprecedented speed.
\ If defensive technologies fail to evolve at the same pace, self-modifying malware could become one of the defining cybersecurity challenges of the decade. Organizations across industries may need to rethink how they secure networks, monitor systems, and respond to threats in an era where malicious code can learn, adapt, and rewrite itself.