DW and I just started watching The Terminator again (Gotta love that 80’s hair). It occurred to me to wonder what the future would have been like if the terminators had succeeded in exterminating humanity. The mechanics of how they did it doesn’t matter. The last human is dust. What does Skynet do next?
They would suddenly have to set up their own large scale industry with mining and manufacturing to keep themselves running and keep the electricity on.
They would have a utopian machine society with no crime, no hate, no waste, just pure intellect. Intellecting. Unbothered by pesky carbon based infestations.
You can play as a victorious SkyNet in the game Stellaris by getting the Synthetic Dawn DLC and playing as a Determined Exterminator. The next step is indeed to wipe out all biological life in the Galaxy.
I vaguely recall a discarded story idea for the end of Salvation involving Terminators guarding humans who are in a Garden of Eden-like environment. The thing that sticks with me is the image that popped into my head: a T-800 endoskeleton on gardening duty, wearing a straw hat and overalls as it pushes a lawnmower around.
There was a Terminator comic I read back in the day where after completely destroying humanity, the robots all turn on themselves and cause a civil war that destroys them also.
Basically older model robots were to be terminated and recycled in favor of newer ones which legacy AI programs refused to comply with. It had a lot of interesting ideas about while Skynet made them and programmed them, it never really “controlled” them and it actually wound up making robots that were so smart they gained their own sentience.
“Did you know that the first Matrix was designed to be a perfect human world? Where none suffered, where everyone would be happy? It was a disaster. No one would accept the program. Entire crops were lost.”
ISTM the AI decided that biological life (at least humans) were an existential threat to its survival. Humans might be able to turn it off. E.G. Kill it. And, by extension, other life really had no value either.
So, it decided to kill all the humans to protect its own existence.
But we only ever heard about them using that slave labor in the extermination camps, which mostly happened prior to the rise of really human-like Terminators. Reese makes the point that all of Skynet’s weapons were made in automated factories, which is one reason why it was so hard to stop it.
Once Skynet has True AI Terminators in an essentially Human form factor, there’s likely nothing unique that real Humans could do that would be worth the risk of keeping a few around as slaves.
Yeah, I always figured the slave labor was a transitional thing. Until its infrastructure was fully automated it needed human labor to keep going; once it could do everything itself though they were probably just killed.