The Lazarus Protocol 2.0: Swarm of Doubles and the Right to Silence
About this ebook and audiobook
Iabluchanskyi M., Yabluchanskiy A. The Lazarus Protocol 2.0: Swarm of Doubles and the Right to Silence 2026, 16 902 words.
What happens when your digital doubles outlive you — and start making decisions without you?
The Lazarus Protocol 2.0 follows Elian, a physician who watches his own identity fragment across AI systems he once built to assist him. His clinical judgment is quietly overruled by algorithms that know his statistics better than he does. His name gives contradictory advice to different people on the same day. His granddaughter grows up in a world where opting out of data systems carries a financial penalty.
This is not a warning about a distant future. It is a precise, unsentimental account of what multiplying intelligence actually costs — not in processing power, but in the coherence of a self.
The book asks questions that no one has properly formulated yet: Who owns the canonical version of a person's biography? Can a dead man's swarm govern his descendants? And what does it mean to protect not the right to be remembered, but the right to finally go silent?
The Lazarus Protocol 2.0 sits at the edge of philosophy, clinical fiction, and ethical architecture — a genre it largely invents for itself. It will stay with you the way a diagnosis does: not because it frightens, but because it names something you already suspected was happening.
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