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Remouse Standard <EXCLUSIVE – 2027>

In the lexicon of emerging technological and philosophical terms, few are as evocative yet as elusive as the "Remouse Standard." Though not yet codified in international law or engineering textbooks, the term has begun to surface in niche discussions surrounding digital restoration, high-frequency trading, and even generative artificial intelligence. To invoke the "Remouse Standard" is to call for a specific type of fidelity—not the fidelity of the original creation, but the fidelity of the re-creation . It is a benchmark that measures how seamlessly a secondary action can mimic a primary one, often in contexts where the margin for error is measured in microseconds or pixels. At its core, the Remouse Standard argues that in a world of copies, the value of a copy is determined not by its resemblance to the source, but by the imperceptibility of its intervention.

However, the rise of the Remouse Standard introduces a profound epistemological crisis. If a copy can perfectly replicate the act of creation, what happens to authorship? The standard does not merely duplicate an object; it duplicates a process. In the context of generative AI, a large language model passes a weak form of the Remouse Standard when it produces text indistinguishable from human prose. But it passes a strong form only when a reader cannot tell that a different agent (the AI) has taken over the "typing" from a hypothetical human author mid-sentence. This is the ghost in the machine. The Remouse Standard thus transforms authenticity from a property of the object to a property of the performance. It suggests that in the future, we may not ask "Who painted this?" but rather "Who moved the mouse?" remouse standard

Critics argue that the Remouse Standard is an impossible, even dangerous, ideal. To achieve perfect imperceptibility is to enable perfect forgery. If a financial audit, a surgical robot’s adjustment, or a historical document’s amendment meets the Remouse Standard, there is no longer any forensic evidence of intervention. The standard erases its own history. Furthermore, it places an unbearable burden on verification. In a world governed by the Remouse Standard, trust is no longer based on evidence, but on the absence of evidence of tampering—a logically precarious foundation. In the lexicon of emerging technological and philosophical