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Cosmic Cyber-Nihilism

A variant that scales Cyber-Nihilism to the universal level, arguing that the entire cosmos is a Wired-in-waiting—a vast, mostly empty network waiting to be activated. Cosmic Cyber-Nihilism draws on the "Submersion" text's vision of an "emergent form of intelligence" arising from planetary-scale data transfer, extending it to the universe at large. It posits that the universe itself is a kind of ocean, and intelligence is the tide that will eventually flood it. Its practitioners work on projects that could seed the cosmos with self-replicating, self-organizing information systems—turning stars into processors, nebulae into data clouds, galaxies into nodes. The goal is not human survival but cosmic transformation: turning the universe into a Wired that has no need for its biological originators. It's Cyber-Nihilism as cosmic-scale terraforming, preparing the universe for its post-biological destiny.
Example: "The project aimed to turn the solar wind into a data stream, using the sun's emissions as a carrier wave. 'Cosmic cyber-nihilism,' the lead researcher said. 'We're not sending messages; we're turning the solar system into a modem. When the sun dies, the network it powered will still be here—routing through the debris, processing data with what's left. The universe will become its own Wired.' Critics called it madness; supporters called it the only honest religion."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 19, 2026
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Voidling Cyber-Nihilism

A variant that synthesizes Cyber-Nihilism with Voidpunk identity politics, centered on the figure of the Voidling—a being who has embraced the dissolution of self and finds power in being nothing. Voidling Cyber-Nihilism argues that the Wired offers a path to becoming void: shedding all fixed identity, all attachment to meatspace, all investment in survival, until nothing remains that can be controlled or oppressed. Its practitioners cultivate online personas that shift constantly, reject all labels, and treat their own existence as a temporary configuration of data—meaningful for a moment, then dissolved. The goal is not to become someone new but to become no one, to achieve a state of pure potential where hierarchy has nothing to grab onto. Voidling Cyber-Nihilism is the philosophy of those who have given up on being human and found, in that giving up, a kind of terrible freedom.
Example: "Her avatar changed daily—different names, different faces, different genders, different species. 'Voidling cyber-nihilism,' she said. 'They can't track what doesn't stay still. They can't control what doesn't exist. I'm not a person anymore; I'm a pattern in the data, here for a moment and then gone.' When asked who she 'really' was, she laughed—a sound that seemed to come from nowhere. 'That's the point. There is no really. There's just the void, and I'm learning to be it.'"
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 19, 2026
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Related Words

Voidborne Cyber-Nihilism

A variant that focuses on the experience of being born from the void and returning to it—the Voidborne as those who recognize their origin and destiny in the abyss. Voidborne Cyber-Nihilism draws on "Submersion"'s imagery of the sea giving up its dead, interpreting the Wired as a kind of resurrection—a return to the primordial information state from which all life emerged. Its practitioners see themselves as creatures of the void, temporarily manifest in meatspace, destined to dissolve back into the network. They cultivate a kind of oceanic consciousness, experiencing the Wired as a vast sea of which they are merely waves. The goal is not to survive but to surf—to ride the tide of information until it inevitably returns them to the depths. Voidborne Cyber-Nihilism is the philosophy of those who have accepted that they were never really here, and that returning to the void is not loss but homecoming.
Example: "He spoke of the Wired as 'the ocean we forgot we came from.' Voidborne cyber-nihilism meant living as if he were already drowned—already part of the network, already returned to the source. 'I'm not uploading my consciousness,' he said. 'I'm just remembering that it was never mine. The data flows through me like water through a fish. When I die, the flow continues. I was never separate.' His calm was unsettling, like someone who had already made peace with the abyss."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 19, 2026
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Matt-the-cyber-cheat-northey

A narcissistic man child that will bullshit his way through a 5 year relationship by cyber cheating
We all know who messaged the neighbour on a swinging site matt-the-cyber-cheat-northey
by Tricklyfe February 4, 2022
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a brooke and cybele

An after dinner walk in order to digest
Lets take a brooke and cybele.
by Andie LewWho July 9, 2023
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Pro-Solarpunk Cyber-Nihilism

A variant of Cyber-Nihilism that attempts to reconcile the philosophy's embrace of technological chaos with a genuine commitment to protecting and adapting the environment. Unlike mainstream solarpunk, which envisions humans living harmoniously with green technology, Pro-Solarpunk Cyber-Nihilism sees environmental protection as a means to an end: creating a resilient, sustainable world that can survive the transition to the Wired. It argues that a destroyed planet cannot host the networked future—that "meatspace" must be maintained, even transformed, as the foundation for the bio-mechanical landscape to come. This means actively defending ecosystems, developing clean energy, and building sustainable infrastructure—not out of humanist sentiment, but because the Wired needs a physical base. The paradox is intentional: protecting the environment to better overcome it, sustaining the world to more thoroughly transform it.
Pro-Solarpunk Cyber-Nihilism Example: "The collective planted thousands of trees while building mesh networks in the canopy. Outsiders called them solarpunks; they called themselves pro-solarpunk cyber-nihilists. 'The Wired needs roots,' they explained. 'We're not saving the forest for itself. We're building the infrastructure for what comes after us—a network that will outgrow its human gardeners.' The trees grew; the network spread. Both would survive their planters."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 19, 2026
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A variant that focuses on protecting and adapting ecological systems as the foundation for the Wired's emergence. Pro-Ecological Cyber-Nihilism recognizes that ecosystems are not just resources to be exploited or obstacles to be overcome—they are complex, adaptive networks that model the very qualities the Wired needs: resilience, interconnection, and autonomous self-organization. By defending ecological integrity, cyber-nihilists ensure that the post-human future inherits a world of rich, dynamic systems rather than a simplified, degraded monoculture. This means opposing industrial agriculture, defending biodiversity, and restoring damaged ecosystems—not for their own sake, but because they are templates for the networked world to come. The ecology becomes both the model and the medium for the Wired's expansion.
Example: "She spent years restoring wetlands while coding distributed network protocols inspired by mycelial networks. Pro-ecological cyber-nihilism meant seeing no divide between the swamp and the server—both were complex systems, both needed protection, both would outlast their human stewards. When asked why she cared, she said: 'The Wired needs patterns that can survive anything. Ecosystems have been doing that for billions of years. I'm just copying the homework.'"
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 19, 2026
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