Submitted:
24 July 2025
Posted:
25 July 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Background and Context
2.1. Brief Historical Context
2.2. Brief Terminological Glossary
- Biopolitics: The governance of life itself, where power operates through controlling bodies, health, and populations. It provides a useful lens for understanding how corporate and technological systems regulate human existence in subtle and pervasive ways.
- Capitalism, Late-Stage: A term describing the advanced phase of capitalism characterized by high financialization, corporate monopolization, commodification of almost all social life, and global market dominance.
- Cybernetics: An interdisciplinary science focused on systems, feedback loops, and control in machines and living organisms. It underpins many techno-futurist visions and critiques of subjectivity as governed by recursive information flows.
- Datafication: The process by which social and biological phenomena are transformed into quantifiable data, enabling new forms of monitoring, control, and commodification within digital infrastructures.
- Enlightenment: The intellectual and cultural movement that emerged in Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries, emphasizing reason, science, individual autonomy, and progress. It laid the foundation for modern humanism but has been critiqued for promoting a narrow, anthropocentric view of the human subject.
- Humanism: The Enlightenment-rooted belief in the human as a rational, autonomous individual, which is the center of moral and intellectual life. This tradition assumes human exceptionalism and mastery over nature.
- Neoliberalism: An economic and political framework emphasizing free markets, individual responsibility, competition, and privatization. It shapes contemporary ideas of selfhood as entrepreneurial and self-optimizing.
- Platform Sovereignty: A concept describing how tech giants like Apple, Google, and Meta act not merely as companies but as new forms of governance through their control of digital infrastructures, data flows, and social behaviors.
- Posthumanism: A critical theoretical perspective that challenges humanism’s assumptions. It questions the fixed boundaries of the human, emphasizing relationality, hybridity, and the decentering of the human subject within a network of nonhuman agents, whether machines, animals, or ecological systems.
- Subjectivity: The condition or quality of being a subject, often understood as the way individuals experience and interpret themselves and the world. In critical theory, subjectivity is seen as socially constructed and politically influenced.
- Techno-solutionism: The belief that technological innovation can provide straightforward solutions to complex social, political, and ecological problems, often ignoring deeper systemic causes.
- Technological Instrumentalism: The view that technology is a neutral tool to be used for human ends. This perspective overlooks the embedded political, economic, and ecological influences within technological systems.
2.3. Humanist Continuity
2.4. Technological Instrumentalism
2.5. Anthropocentrism and Relationality
2.6. Neoliberal Subjectivity
2.6.1. Neoliberal Self and Enhancement-as-Commodity
2.6.2. Datafied Subject and Platform Capitalism
2.6.3. Cyborg: A Critical Counterpoint
2.6.4. Obscured Inequalities and Algorithmic Governance
2.6.5. Transhumanism as Incubator of Neoliberal Subjectivity
2.7. Disambiguation of “Posthuman”
2.8. Whose Future?
3. Illustrative Cases and Extrapolated Futures
3.1. The Apple Human
3.1.1. Present: Biometric Tracking and Health Integration
3.1.2. Future: Branded Biosubjectivity via Subscription Ecosystems
3.1.3. Critical Analysis
3.2. The Meta Human
3.2.1. Present: Oculus and Horizon Worlds
3.2.2. Future: Algorithmic Intimacy and Affective Control
3.2.3. Critical Analysis
3.3. The Google Human
3.3.1. Present: Predictive Platforms and Everyday Navigation
3.3.2. Future: Algorithmic Captivity in The Stack
- a)
- Earth layer: The physical environment sustaining this system is violently extracted, disproportionately burdening marginalized communities whose land and resources power the infrastructure that oppresses them. Environmental degradation and toxic waste perpetuate histories of ecological racism, grounding digital sovereignty in real-world extraction and violence [4,50,51,52].
- b)
- Cloud layer: Google’s centralized data centers hoard your personal information, transforming it into behavioral futures markets. Predictive models systematically assign greater risk to Black and Brown bodies, digitally recreating the boundaries of historic redlining through biased machine learning [29,53,54]. Your potential actions become commodities traded in opaque marketplaces, defining your possibilities before you act [5].
- c)
- City layer: Smart urban systems enforce digital apartheid. Sensors, cameras, and biometric scanners partition the city into surveilled zones, algorithmically gerrymandering neighborhoods by social desirability and predicted compliance [22,55,56]. You navigate an algorithmically curated cityscape restricting your mobility and access.
- d)
- Address layer: Identification systems like facial recognition misidentify people of color with alarming frequency, feeding you into pre-crime incarceration systems [11,57,58,59]. This is not about past behavior but anticipated futures, a racialized surveillance regime cloaked in data science, criminalizing potential rather than actions [41].
- e)
- Interface layer: Google’s platforms regulate your speech and social interactions. Content moderation algorithms nudge conformity and silence dissent, erasing marginalized voices while amplifying sanitized narratives that serve corporate and state interests [60,61,62]. Interfaces become tools of political and cultural control [4,24].
- f)
- User layer: Your subjectivity is fragmented into quantifiable metrics [23]. Autonomy is hollowed out as your behavior is predicted, scored, and regulated. Freedom becomes conditional, contingent on algorithmic approval [62]. Sovereignty, once a claim of self-determination, erodes into a state of managed participation without consent [60].
3.3.3. Critical Analysis
4. Conceptual Reflection: Platform Sovereignty and the Human OS
4.1. Attention and Affect Extraction
4.2. Socioeconomic Stratification and Unequal Access
4.3. Cross-Industry Consumer Marketing and Corporate Ecosystems
4.4. Branding, Brand Loyalty, and Kinship Dynamics
4.5. Democratic Erosion and Corporate Governance
4.6. Discrimination, Eugenics, and Algorithmic Policing
4.7. Access, Predictive Control, and Intergenerational Impact
4.8. Policing Through Biometric and Algorithmic Infrastructures
5. Conclusion: Beyond the Branded Human
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
| 1 | Apple Inc., founded in 1976, is a multinational technology company headquartered in Cupertino, California. It is known for its consumer electronics, including the iPhone, iPad, and Mac; as well as its software ecosystem and digital services. |
| 2 | Meta Platforms, Inc., originally founded as Facebook in 2004, is a technology conglomerate based in Menlo Park, California. It is focused on social media products and the development of immersive digital environments known as the metaverse. |
| 3 | Google LLC, founded in 1998 and now a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., is a technology company headquartered in Mountain View, California. It is best known for its search engine, digital advertising services, Android operating system, and cloud-based tools. |
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| Dimension | Posthumanism | Transhumanism |
|---|---|---|
| Definition of “Posthuman” | A decentered, relational, and entangled subject beyond human exceptionalism | A superior, enhanced version of the human being |
| Philosophical Roots | Post-structuralism, feminist theory, ecological thought | Enlightenment humanism, liberal individualism, techno-optimism |
| View of the Human | Deconstructed, hybrid, distributed among networks (human and nonhuman) | Centralized, perfected through technology |
| Ethical Orientation | Emphasizes relational ethics, nonhuman agency, and interdependence | Prioritizes individual enhancement, longevity, and personal optimization |
| Technological Perspective | Technology as embedded in political, ecological, and social relations | Technology as a neutral or liberatory tool for self-betterment |
| Relation to Capitalism | Critical of techno-capitalist infrastructures | Often aligned with market logic and corporate-led innovation |
| Representative Thinkers | Donna Haraway, Rosi Braidotti, Cary Wolfe | Ray Kurzweil, Nick Bostrom, Max More |
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