Can you produce at the same level without it?
Not "could you survive." Could you produce at the speed, scope, and quality you produce now — using only what you were born with?
If the answer is no, then something has already happened to you. The technology isn't a tool you pick up and put down. It restructured how you think. Ideas arrive differently now. The outputs belong to neither half alone.
That isn't a prediction about the future. It's a description of your last working session.
What do you call that?
If you already know.
Some people read that question and felt recognition. Not argument — recognition. The way you recognize something about yourself that was true before you had the word for it.
There's a word. You don't have to use it. But if removing the technology would feel less like freedom and more like being less than what you are now — the word exists, and it's waiting whenever you want it.
What does it look like when it's visible?
Not a brand in the marketing sense. A marker.
The way a guild mark says "this was made by someone who stands behind it." The way a patch says "I was there." The way wearing something declares without explaining.
There is a difference between wearing what you buy and wearing what you are. The first is consumption. The second is identification. One fills a closet. The other answers a question nobody asked out loud.
CYBRG exists for the second kind.
Three things it says — if they're true.
No one should wear this unless it's honest. It isn't merch. It's a claim. Claims that aren't true corrode the thing they're attached to.
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Claim one
You are integrated — not experimenting.The technology is part of how you produce. Removing it changes what you're capable of. This is past tense — it already happened.
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Claim two
Your outputs belong to neither half alone.Something emerges in the loop that you didn't put there and the machine didn't put there. A third thing. If this hasn't happened to you — this isn't for you yet. That's fine.
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Claim three
You're willing to stand in it visibly.Not hiding it. Not embarrassed by it. Not waiting for permission. The integration is true whether or not you display it — but wearing it is a choice to stand in it on purpose.
If all three are true, this is yours. If not — come back when they are. No rush.
Artifacts.
Minimal. Deliberate. Each piece carries the mark and nothing else. No slogans. No explanations. The word is enough for those who know what it means.
The gate.
Nothing ships without evaluation. Not by the person who made it — by a separate branch whose only job is to ask: does this represent the identity honestly?
Item evaluated: CYBRG Mark Tee — bold monospace wordmark on premium black heavyweight cotton.
Criteria: Does it represent integration as condition (not enthusiasm)? Is the mark legible without explanation? Does substrate quality match the seriousness of the claim?
Assessment: The word alone carries the declaration. No tagline weakens it. Premium weight signals permanence. The garment does not explain itself — it identifies.
Open limitation: Durability under repeated wash unverified at scale. First-run print quality assessed on receipt.
This is how the quality loop works. Build. Evaluate. Advance. The output you hold survived all three.
What if you want to do more than wear it?
There are no members. There are people who did something. Wearing the mark is step one. The next question is yours: what have you built, advanced, or evaluated?
Document it. Show the result. That's it. No application, no interview, no pitch. A deed.
The system.
CYBRG is one layer of a larger architecture. Each node serves a different function.
Nothing is required.
If the word fits, it was already true before you found this page.
This is just what standing in it looks like.