This review is based on an uncorrected e-galley of this novel.
In an artificial intelligence lab in Shanghai, something has gone terribly wrong. Days after a major breakthrough in machine learning, CyberGen Industries' lead AI scientist is dead—and their precious prototype has vanished into the ether. An investigation reveals that, against all odds, the lab's “unhackable” system has been breached.
The discovery, an algorithm mimicking human intelligence, is growing quickly—becoming more cunning and unpredictable with each passing hour. Soon its capabilities will eclipse its creators entirely.
Who stole it? And more troubling, what do they plan to do with it?
Ex-NSA hacker Adrian Pryor may be the only person on the planet capable of reining it in. He spent his career keeping the world safe, a vigilance for which he paid an enormous, personal price. Adrian knows there are people who will stop at nothing to control the powerful technology. He must find a way to do the impossible: to stop them, and to outmaneuver a rival more clever, more powerful, and more alien than anything he has ever seen.
In a time when AI algorithms are becoming hot button issues, we must start asking ourselves what the repercussions of this technology could be and what might happen if these algorithms become sentient creatures. This novel does just that. The Doomsday Code explores the lengths that people will go to in order to escape death, even to the point where they merge with a machine and you have to ask yourself what actually makes us human.
Though this wasn't the best novel I've read, I thought it was entertaining. It was fairly quick to get through and I thought that the author did their research when looking at this topic. I definitely recommend.
Thanks to Netgalley, the publisher, and the author for an e-ARC of this novel. All opinions are my own.