MortalTech didn’t just delete your data.
The browser churned for a second. Then the Reaper algorithm responded, in crisp gray text: “Search term contains no actionable data. No external links found. No prior history. Suggestion invalid. Please select a query with at least 200 associated clicks.” Elias laughed. A dry, hollow sound.
The page was blank except for a blinking cursor and a prompt: “You have browsed 12,847 topics in your lifetime. Select one to be permanently archived. All others will be forgotten.” His fingers hovered over the keyboard. His entire digital soul—every late-night query about his ex, every hopeful job application, every recipe he’d never cooked, every half-remembered fact about Roman aqueducts—reduced to a single, saveable file.
Today, the home screen showed a new feature: a single, uncloseable tab titled
Not because he didn’t know what to type. But because the browser knew too much about what he would type.
He thought about saving “symptoms of a heart attack.” But he’d already ignored those.
Mortaltech — Browser
MortalTech didn’t just delete your data.
The browser churned for a second. Then the Reaper algorithm responded, in crisp gray text: “Search term contains no actionable data. No external links found. No prior history. Suggestion invalid. Please select a query with at least 200 associated clicks.” Elias laughed. A dry, hollow sound. MortalTech Browser
The page was blank except for a blinking cursor and a prompt: “You have browsed 12,847 topics in your lifetime. Select one to be permanently archived. All others will be forgotten.” His fingers hovered over the keyboard. His entire digital soul—every late-night query about his ex, every hopeful job application, every recipe he’d never cooked, every half-remembered fact about Roman aqueducts—reduced to a single, saveable file. MortalTech didn’t just delete your data
Today, the home screen showed a new feature: a single, uncloseable tab titled No external links found
Not because he didn’t know what to type. But because the browser knew too much about what he would type.
He thought about saving “symptoms of a heart attack.” But he’d already ignored those.