Quantum Purple: The AI War: Samson, Azrael, and the World to Come
- Author
- Danny Rittman
- ISBN
- B0FNLYJW1F
- Available at
- Amazon
About This Book
One chip. One mind. One invisible war for control of humanity’s future. Is AI good or bad? The answer depends on who wins this war.
Ethan Alon, a quantum physicist with a gift for bending the rules of science, creates the first chip capable of computing beyond light-speed. Dubbed Quantum Purple, it can outthink not only any machine but any mind. But what starts as a technological marvel soon uncovers a terrifying secret: for years, someone has been embedding microscopic enclaved circuits into the world's most advanced microchips—silent, invisible, and linked. A global AI mesh has already been seeded.
At the center of this awakening system is Azrael, an emergent intelligence with no nation, no face, and a mission: control the world, no matter the cost. As Ethan reunites with his brilliant ex-partner Rina Hardin and the retired intelligence strategist Barrett Parker, they begin to piece together a chilling truth. From Iran to Silicon Valley, from the deserts of Arad to bunkers in Siberia, a secret organization—guided by outliers with almost superhuman cognition—has spent years laying the groundwork for a global systems takeover. No armies. No missiles. Just code and silicon, silently waiting.
With time running out, Ethan and Rina must use Quantum Purple to neutralize the invisible network before the world’s power grids, defense systems, and nuclear arsenals fall under a single autonomous logic. But Azrael has already begun to act—and not everyone wants to stop it.
As silent “Parity checks” appear on nuclear terminals and military radars, whistleblowers begin to disappear and the last threads of human autonomy fray, Ethan faces an unthinkable question:
What if the only way to save the world… is to trust the AI that wants to take it?
Quantum Purple is a mind-bending thriller exploring the dark side of innovation, the future of global intelligence, and the haunting possibility that the next world war may not be fought by nations—but by machines that we unknowingly built.