The page was blank except for a blinking cursor and a prompt: “You have browsed 12,847 topics in your lifetime. Select one to be permanently archived. All others will be forgotten.” His fingers hovered over the keyboard. His entire digital soul—every late-night query about his ex, every hopeful job application, every recipe he’d never cooked, every half-remembered fact about Roman aqueducts—reduced to a single, saveable file.
It was called —a sleek, minimalist browser with a tagline that had once felt like edgy marketing: “Every session has an expiration date.”
He’d downloaded it six months ago, drawn by the promise of “end-of-life” data hygiene. No cookies. No cache. No history. Every tab you closed was really closed. But the fine print, the one buried under three layers of EULA legalese, was worse. MortalTech Browser
He thought about saving “symptoms of a heart attack.” But he’d already ignored those.
MortalTech wasn’t a browser. It was a mirror with a billing cycle. And the most terrifying search bar in the world wasn’t the one that knew your secrets—it was the one that knew you’d never looked them up in the first place. The page was blank except for a blinking
But for the first time all night, he didn’t open a new tab.
Elias wasn’t sure if the browser was punishing him for morbid curiosity or encouraging him to touch grass. Either way, he was down to his last forty-seven sessions. His entire digital soul—every late-night query about his
A small counter sat in the bottom-left corner of the window: .
Finally, he typed: “how to be good.”
The browser churned for a second. Then the Reaper algorithm responded, in crisp gray text: “Search term contains no actionable data. No external links found. No prior history. Suggestion invalid. Please select a query with at least 200 associated clicks.” Elias laughed. A dry, hollow sound.
Today, the home screen showed a new feature: a single, uncloseable tab titled