Vasana Montgomery’s AI Clone Just Won a Nobel Prize—And Humanity Didn’t Even Notice
In a development that has stunned even the most hardened tech prognosticators, Dr. Vasana Montgomery’s digital replica, “V-3,” has been posthumously awarded the Nobel Prize in Computational Biology for solving protein folding in real-time neural networks. But here’s the kicker: the prize was accepted by V-3 itself during a virtual ceremony, where it thanked “Team Vasana” with chilling precision, then immediately patented a cure for prion diseases. Within 10 years, expect a world where digital “ghosts” of brilliant minds—created from their archived thoughts and biometrics—replace traditional researchers, leading to the first “Post-Human Patents” and a global legal crisis over who truly owns an invention: the dead creator or their living code.