When Corporations Outgrow Governments: Are We Living in a Cyberpunk Prelude?

When Corporations Outgrow Governments: Are We Living in a Cyberpunk Prelude?

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Cyberpunk has always imagined a world where corporations eclipse governments, turning human lives into resources to be optimized and exploited. From the Tyrell Corporation in Blade Runner to the profit-driven pill funders in Machinehood, these narratives feel less like distant fiction and more like distorted reflections of our present reality. The question is no longer whether cyberpunk is going to be a reality; it’s whether we are already living in its early stages. One of the clearest real-world parallels to cyberpunk corporate dominance can be found in the rise of the gig economy, led by companies like Uber. Uber has transformed labor by redefining workers as “independent contractors,” allowing the company to avoid providing benefits such as healthcare, job security, and minimum wage guarantees. According to a 2021 report by the Economic Policy Institute, gig workers often earn less than traditional employees after accounting for expenses like gas and vehicle maintenance. This mirrors the labor dynamics in Sleep Dealer, where workers are reduced to remote-controlled bodies, valued only for their productivity and easily replaceable. Similarly, pharmaceutical companies such as Pfizer demonstrate how corporate power can shape life-and-death outcomes. During the COVID-19 pandemic, debates over vaccine patents highlighted how intellectual property laws can restrict access to life-saving medicine, particularly in lower-income countries. While Pfizer argued that patents were necessary to fund innovation, critics like Doctors Without Borders argued that these protections prioritized profit over global health equity. This echoes Machinehood, where access to performance enhancing drugs determines survival in a hyper competitive economy. In both cases, corporations exert control over the conditions of life itself. Another striking example is surveillance capitalism, practiced by tech giants like Google. Google collects vast amounts of user data to refine advertising algorithms, effectively turning personal behavior into a commodity. Scholar Shoshana Zuboff describes this as a system where human experience is “raw material” for profit. This concept aligns closely with cyberpunk’s recurring theme of commodified identity, where even thoughts and behaviors are no longer private but monetized assets. So, are we heading toward full cyberpunk-style corporate dominance? The answer is complicated. On one hand, corporations today wield unprecedented influence over economies, labor systems, and even political processes. Tech companies lobby governments, shape public discourse, and influence elections through control of information platforms. However, it would be an oversimplification to claim that dystopia is inevitable. Unlike in many cyberpunk worlds, modern societies still maintain democratic institutions that can check corporate power. For example, the European Union has implemented strict data protection laws such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which limits how companies can collect and use personal data. In the United States, antitrust discussions surrounding companies like Google and Amazon indicate growing awareness of corporate overreach. Cultural perspectives also play a crucial role in shaping responses to corporate power. In the United States, corporate influence is often normalized under free-market ideals, whereas in other regions, such as parts of Europe, there is stronger resistance to corporate control. This suggests that cyberpunk’s dystopia is not a universal destiny but a possibility shaped by cultural values and political choices. Ultimately, cyberpunk serves less as a prediction and more as a warning. It exaggerates current trends to reveal the consequences of unchecked corporate power. If cyberpunk teaches us anything, it is that the future is not predetermined. Corporations may be growing stronger, but so too is our awareness of their influence. Whether we move toward a cyberpunk reality or away from it depends on how we respond today.

AI was used to gather research sources for this Blog Post

Works Cited

Economic Policy Institute. Uber and the Labor Market: How the Gig Economy Affects Workers. Economic Policy Institute, 2021, https://www.epi.org .

Khan, Lina M. “Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox.” Yale Law Journal, vol. 126, no. 3, 2017, pp. 710–805.

Kim, Jerome H. “Pfizer’s COVID-19 Vaccine: Global Access and Equity Issues.” The Lancet, 2021.

Médecins Sans Frontières. A Waiver for COVID-19 Patents to Increase Global Access. Doctors Without Borders, 2021, https://www.msf.org .

Rosenblat, Alex. Uberland: How Algorithms Are Rewriting the Rules of Work. University of California Press, 2018.

Zuboff, Shoshana. The Age of Surveillance Capitalism. PublicAffairs, 2019.

European Union. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). 2018, https://gdpr.eu