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Hyperfuturistic

A term used to describe a piece of media that is set unnecessarily or ridiculously far into the future. Mainly refers to the level of technology within the work.
Schlock Mercenary seems almost too hyperfuturistic.
by hamwhich May 24, 2024
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Hyperslavery

A protologism describing the convergence of multiple systems of control into a new form of unfreedom that masquerades as liberty. Hyperslavery is what happens when late-stage capitalism, the gig economy, consumerism, social atomization, liberal democratic police states, precarized labor rights, AI surveillance, and creeping Western authoritarianism merge into a seamless cage with no visible bars. The worker is "free" to choose their exploitation, "free" to risk their life delivering food through floodwaters for starvation wages, "free" to be algorithmically monitored, scored, and discarded. There is no master with a whip—only an app, a contract, a debt, a threat of deactivation. Hyperslavery is freedom so complete that the only choice is which form of destruction to accept.

The warehouse worker who dies of heatstroke because the facility has no air conditioning and quitting would mean losing their housing. The delivery driver who crosses a flooded bridge because the algorithm will penalize their acceptance rate. The gig worker who calculates whether the cost of a doctor visit is worth more than the pain of the injury. These aren't slaves in chains—they're hyperslaves, bound by the invisible chains of precarity, debt, surveillance, and the constant, crushing weight of "choice." The system doesn't need to force you when starving you gently is more efficient.
Example: "When the app demanded she work through the hurricane or lose her 'reliability score,' she finally understood hyperslavery—she wasn't an employee, she wasn't a contractor, she was just a node in a system designed to extract her life until she had nothing left to give."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Hyperslaves

The subject class of Hyperslavery: individuals trapped within the total system of late-stage capitalism, gig economy precarity, consumerist ideology, social atomization, police state surveillance, AI monitoring, and systematically eliminated alternatives. Hyperslaves are not slaves in the traditional sense—they are not legally owned, not physically chained, not formally unfree. They are slaves in a deeper sense: their entire existence is structured by forces they cannot control, their labor extracted by systems they cannot escape, their lives monitored by technologies they cannot evade, their desires shaped by markets they cannot resist. The hyperslave works, consumes, scrolls, votes, obeys, and dies within a cage whose bars are made of "choice," "opportunity," and "freedom." They are the population of the open-air prison.
Hyperslaves Example: "He wasn't owned by anyone, but he worked for apps that controlled his schedule, paid wages that guaranteed his precarity, monitored his every move, and shaped his desires through endless ads—a Hyperslave in the open-air prison, free to leave but with nowhere to go."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Hyperslave Market

The total system of exchange in which hyperslaves are bought, sold, priced, and allocated across the various sectors of the open-air prison economy. Unlike traditional slave markets with explicit auctions, the Hyperslave Market operates through algorithmic matching, gig economy platforms, credit scoring, surveillance ranking, and the constant auction of human time to the lowest bidder. Workers are not sold as individuals but as data points, their labor power priced by algorithms, their value calculated by predictive models, their lives scored by systems they cannot see. The Hyperslave Market never closes, never rests, never stops extracting—it is the 24/7 auction of human existence to the highest (or lowest) bidder.
Hyperslave Market Example: "He didn't realize he was on the Hyperslave Market until the app changed his pay rate based on demand, his schedule based on algorithms, his ranking based on customer reviews he couldn't contest—his entire working life was a continuous auction."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Hyperslave Owners

The class that benefits from, controls, and maintains the Hyperslave system—not individuals who own particular hyperslaves, but the diffuse collection of corporations, platforms, investors, algorithms, and systems that collectively own the conditions under which hyperslaves exist. Hyperslave Owners include the tech platforms that design the apps, the venture capitalists that fund them, the shareholders that profit from them, the algorithms that manage them, and the political systems that protect them. Unlike traditional slave owners, they bear no personal responsibility for individual slaves—they simply own the system that makes slavery total.
Hyperslave Owners Example: "He couldn't point to a single person who owned him—his Hyperslave Owners were distributed across a dozen apps, a hundred investors, a thousand algorithms, and a political system that protected them all."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Chronic hypercultureemia

Anyone who has this rare diseas is incredibly cultured.
Trish: I see killue
Someone: I see u are a man of culture
Trish: Ye i have Chronic hypercultureemia
by TRISH=TRASH July 22, 2020
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Wage Hyperslavery

An advanced form of wage slavery that fuses traditional wage exploitation with the total system of Hyperslavery—combining late-stage capitalism, gig economy precarity, consumerist ideology, social atomization, police state surveillance, AI monitoring, and systematically eroded labor rights into a seamless cage. The wage hyperslave is "free" in the formal sense—they chose this job, signed this contract, can quit anytime—but this freedom operates within a total system designed to make quitting impossible or suicidal. The wage is too low to save, too high to abandon; the monitoring is too pervasive to evade; the precarity is too total to resist; the alternatives have been systematically eliminated. Wage hyperslavery is what happens when the old "wage slave" metaphor becomes literal description: you work, you starve, you're watched, you're scored, you're disposable, and you're told you're free.
Example: "She worked sixty hours a week, still couldn't afford rent, was algorithmically monitored for bathroom breaks, had no healthcare, no sick days, no union, and was told she was lucky to have the opportunity—not wage slavery anymore, but Wage Hyperslavery."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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