The Great Sock Conspiracy: Outthinking Cortex (Or Not)

The day started like any other intergalactic tax investigation: with a creeping suspicion that someone, somewhere, was up to no good, and my robot cat mocking me for apparently having the IQ of a microwaved turnip.

Cat and I had finally secured a meeting with the X Epsilon Mushk Jr., Chief Executive of Cortex. A man so rich he could buy a solar system and still have enough left over to gold-plate the rivets used in the construction of moonbuses made by one of his other shady operations. A man whose name, I discovered, was physically impossible for me to pronounce correctly.

“Mr. Ex-Elong… Epilson… Mr. Eel-X…” I stammered, shaking his hand.

“X Epsilon Mushk Jr.,” he corrected smoothly, as if this was a perfectly normal sequence of words and not a cruel joke on the alphabet.

“Yes, yes, that’s what I said,” I lied. “Now, let’s talk Cortex. Specifically, how you’re stealing people’s thoughts.”

X Epsilon Mushk Jr. gave me the blank, impassive stare of a man who had spent his life hearing conspiracy theories and had reached the pinnacle of not giving a single neuron. “Cortex doesn’t steal thoughts,” he said. “We predict them. It’s all very simple—our AI takes billions of data points and—”

I waved a hand dismissively. “Save the technobabble, Mr. Epsilon Elong.”

“X Epsilon Mushk Jr.,” he said again, visibly aging as he spoke.

“Exactly,” I said. “You see, I’ve already figured out how to beat your system.”

X Epsilon Mushk Jr. raised an eyebrow. Cat, who was perched smugly on the conference table, sighed and began cleaning an imaginary speck of dirt off his Rubanob paw.

“You claim Cortex can predict my every move?” I continued. “Well, what if I introduce… chaos?”

“Chaos?” X Epsilon repeated warily.

I leaned forward dramatically. “Yes. Specifically, socks.

There was quite a long silence.

“What?” asked X Epsilon Mushk Jr., who clearly was not prepared for the intellectual duel he found himself in

“Socks,” I repeated triumphantly. “Your AI predicts everything based on past data, right? Well, what happens if I wear mismatched socks? How will your system cope if I wear—say—one blue sock and one green sock? What then, Mr X?”

X Epsilon Mushk Jr. just blinked at me.

I pressed on, emboldened by the sheer genius of my revelation. “Every morning, I let Cortex scan me. It reads my thoughts, my habits, my entire mental blueprint. But if my socks are unpredictable, it proves Cortex is stealing my thoughts—because how else would it know which socks I was going to pick?”

X Epsilon Mushk Jr. did not seem as stunned by my revelation as I had hoped.

“Inspector,” Cat interjected, rubbing his temple with a paw. “That’s not how probability works.”

“Exactly!” I said, ignoring him completely. “We’re onto them! Cortex thinks it can outthink me, but I will outthink the outthinkers by refusing to think in a thinkable way!”

Cat groaned. “Oh dear AI, AI AI…..you’ve had a rough week Inspector. Perhaps best to take one of your old fashioned pills”

“I have not had a bad week,” I snapped.

“Yes, you have,” Cat said. “You got your head stuck in the nutrient generator in the kitchen remember looking for your sausage.”

“That’s unrelated!” I barked. “Now, Mr. Mushky Senior—”

“X Epsilon Musk Jr.,” he corrected again, now looking like a man who deeply regretted every choice that had led him to this moment.

I ignored him. “Tell me this—if I wear pink socks with purple polka dots tomorrow, will your system know?”

X Epsilon Musk Jr. sighed. “We don’t track sock colors.”

“Ah-ha! That’s exactly what you would say if you did track them but didn’t want me to know you did.”

“I assure you, Cortex has no interest in—”

“Oh, no,” I interrupted, eyes widening. “You already knew I was going to say that! That means you do track sock colors!”

“This is unbearable,” muttered X Epsilon Musk Jr.

Cat, meanwhile, was tapping into Cortex’s mainframe via his internal systems. “You might be onto something, Inspector,” he mused.

“Aha! See?” I pointed at Cat. “Even my robot cat agrees.”

“No, I meant that Cortex does have a small subroutine for tracking seemingly irrelevant personal habits,” Cat admitted. “But it’s mostly used for targeted sock advertising.”

“Sock advertising?” I gasped. “That’s even worse! Not only are they stealing thoughts, but they’re also trying to sell me things based on them? This is a crime against free will!”

X Epsilon Musk Jr. rubbed his temples and his eyes started to twitch. “This entire meeting is a crime against my time.”

I stood up dramatically. “Well, Mr Y, you may think you’ve won. But know this—I will never wear the socks you suggest to me!”

X Epsilon Mushk Jr. looked at Cat. “Is he always like this?”

“Yes,” said Cat.

With that, I stormed out, convinced that I had single-handedly unraveled the greatest technological scandal of the century. Behind me, Cat sighed and followed.

And the next morning, when my Cortex feed displayed an ad for 50% off novelty socks, I screamed in horror.

They knew.

The Inspector and Cat Discuss the Sinosovurean Situation

The Inspector and Cat were sitting in the cramped, yet oddly cozy interior of the Inspector’s interstellar vehicle, with Cat perched on the dashboard, meticulously cleaning his whiskers with a paw, while the Inspector fiddled with a holographic display showing an alarming rate of Sinosovurean population growth.

“Cat”, said the Inspector, “Have you seen the latest reports on the Sinosovurean expansion? They’re spreading faster than an AI virus in a Brainium coding camp”.

Cat responded,  “Indeed, I have. It seems Earth’s contraception techniques are about as effective as a screen door on a spaceship. What did they expect, handing out Earth-style contraceptives to a species for whom mating is as casual as a nod and as simple as a paw shake”?

“Precisely”, intoned the Inspector, “It’s like trying to use a net to stop sand. Earth’s methods are no match for Sovurean… ermmm, ahh…enthusiasm shallwe say. We might as well be using water pistols to fight a forest fire.

Cat chuckled as best one could when also purring and said, “I suppose humans have found the one scenario where “multiply and conquer” wasn’t a metaphor. And now, the universe is getting a lesson in Sinosovurean social etiquette”.

The Inspector responded, “The irony is, this whole debacle could have been avoided with a bit of cultural research. But no, we charged in, contraceptives blazing, assuming everyone reproduces at the same awkward, cumbersome pace as humans do”.

“Well, to be fair”, said Cat,  “Who could have predicted that a handshake equivalent for them would lead to such… prolific outcomes? Earth’s First Contact protocols clearly didn’t include a chapter on “When Handshakes Lead to Offspring.”

“Yes, It’s an oversight that’s turning the Milky Way into the Milky Nursery. We need a new approach, something that respects their culture but also gently suggests that not every greeting needs to be so… fruitful” replied the Inspector.

Cat, being as superiorly helpful as ever said, “Might I suggest a universal greeting protocol that involves a respectful nod from a safe, non-reproductive distance? Perhaps even a nice, sturdy pair of gloves for every human ambassador”?

The Inspector laughed and said, “Gloves might indeed be the key to the risks of galactic overpopulation. Who would ever have guessed the future of interstellar diplomacy would be decided by an accessory designed to keep our hands warm”?

“Indeed”, said Cat, “And maybe Earth can learn something from this. Next time, instead of contraceptives, they could try researching etiquette practices on newly discovered planets with a civilisation very different from ours on it.. Far less awkward for everyone involved”.

“An etiquette manual for the cosmos… I like it, Cat”, said the Inspector. “It’s decided then. I’ll propose it to the Galactic Council. “The Universal Guide to Polite and Non-Reproductive Greetings.It’ll be a bestseller”.

Cat responded, “Actually I have already proposed it to the Galactic Council. They are considering my detailed proposal as we speak”. 

“What, WHAT”, yelled the Inspector, “How dare you submit my idea!”

“Your idea? Your idea”, responded Cat rather sarcastically, “You have no ideas on anything other than how to steal my ideas and claim them for your own”.

“That’s absolutely so not true”, I have lots of good ideas.

“Give me a for instance”, said Cat.

“I refuse to engage in a pointless debate with a robot designed to serve me”, yelled the Inspector.

“I rest my case,” said Cat just before the Inspector grabbed him by his rubberised tail and explained a new idea he had just had about how long robot cats made of Rubanon could withstand the temperature in the ship’s waste incinerator.