Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

TechCrunch is headed to Tokyo — and it’s bringing the Startup Battlefield with it

France to abandon Windows for Linux to reduce dependence on US technology

Volkswagen begins testing its self-driving minibuses in Los Angeles ahead of launch with Uber

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    Florida AG announces OpenAI investigation into shootings allegedly involving ChatGPT

    10 April 2026

    ChatGPT finally offers $100/month plan

    10 April 2026

    AWS boss explains why investing billions in both Anthropic and OpenAI is an okay conflict

    9 April 2026

    Poke makes using AI agents as easy as sending a text

    9 April 2026

    Last 3 days to save up to $500 on your Disrupt 2026 Pass

    8 April 2026
  • Apps

    Last 24 hours: Save up to $500 on your Disrupt 2026 Pass

    10 April 2026

    The EFF is the latest organization to leave X

    10 April 2026

    Last 2 days to save up to $500 on your Disrupt 2026 ticket

    9 April 2026

    Canva Doubles Down on AI and Marketing Automation with Simtheory, Ortto Acquisitions

    9 April 2026

    Atlassian launches visual AI tools and third-party agents in Confluence

    8 April 2026
  • Crypto

    British cryptographer Adam Back denies NYT report that he is Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto

    9 April 2026

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025
  • Fintech

    Cash app launches ‘pay later’ feature for P2P transfers

    3 April 2026

    Doss raises $55 million for AI inventory management that connects to ERP

    24 March 2026

    Despite stiff competition, Kalshi, Polymarket CEOs back $35m VC fund projections

    23 March 2026

    Amid legal turmoil, Kalshi is temporarily banned in Nevada

    20 March 2026

    Nominations for the Startup Battlefield 200 are still open

    19 March 2026
  • Hardware

    Amazon is ending support for older Kindle devices

    9 April 2026

    Intel signs Elon Musk’s Terafab chip project

    8 April 2026

    The Xiaomi 17 Ultra has some impressive extras that make taking photos really fun

    6 April 2026

    In Japan, the robot doesn’t come for your job. fills the one no one wants

    6 April 2026

    Peter Thiel’s big bet on solar-powered cow collars

    5 April 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    TechCrunch is headed to Tokyo — and it’s bringing the Startup Battlefield with it

    10 April 2026

    Spotify now allows everyone to turn off videos in its app

    9 April 2026

    As YouTube expands into TV, it sees more interactive video across all formats

    9 April 2026

    Tubi is the first streamer to launch a native app on ChatGPT

    8 April 2026

    Binge is a movie watching app that warns you about skips in real time

    7 April 2026
  • Security

    France to abandon Windows for Linux to reduce dependence on US technology

    10 April 2026

    VeraCrypt encryption software developer says Windows users may experience startup problems after Microsoft shuts down its account

    10 April 2026

    Hackers steal and leak sensitive LAPD police documents

    9 April 2026

    The developer of WireGuard VPN cannot send software updates after Microsoft locks the account

    9 April 2026

    Hack-for-hire group caught targeting Android devices and iCloud backups

    8 April 2026
  • Startups

    What founders can learn from Anjuna’s layoffs and recovery

    10 April 2026

    Former Tesla engineer’s startup taps Pronto to help automate a copper mine

    9 April 2026

    Databricks co-founder wins prestigious ACM award, says ‘AGI is already here’

    9 April 2026

    Why a former AirPods engineer is now building heat pumps

    8 April 2026

    AI startup Rocket offers McKinsey-style reporting at a fraction of the cost

    7 April 2026
  • Transportation

    Volkswagen begins testing its self-driving minibuses in Los Angeles ahead of launch with Uber

    10 April 2026

    Volkswagen is dropping the all-electric ID.4 in the U.S

    10 April 2026

    Waymo robotaxis tracks potholes and shares that data with Waze users

    9 April 2026

    Self-driving car in Texas hits and kills mother duck, sparking neighborhood outrage

    9 April 2026

    Hermeus raises $350 million to build unmanned hypersonic fighters

    8 April 2026
  • Venture

    How to make the Startup Battlefield Top 20 — and what each company gets regardless

    10 April 2026

    Collide Capital Raises $95M to Back Future-of-Work Fintech Startups

    9 April 2026

    VC Eclipse has a new $1.3 billion fund to back — and build — “natural AI” startups

    8 April 2026

    The AI ​​gold rush is pulling private wealth into riskier, older bets

    7 April 2026

    Save up to $500 on tickets this week for Disrupt 2026

    6 April 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Security»How the classic anime ‘Ghost in the Shell’ predicted the future of cybersecurity 30 years ago
Security

How the classic anime ‘Ghost in the Shell’ predicted the future of cybersecurity 30 years ago

techtost.comBy techtost.com20 November 202506 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
How The Classic Anime 'ghost In The Shell' Predicted The
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The year is 2030. A “notorious mystery hacker” known as o Puppetry is wreaking havoc on the internet by seeping into the so-called cyberbrains of several people as well as “every terminal on the network.” As it turns out, Puppet Master is a creation of Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In other words, Puppet Master is what we would today call a government-sponsored hacker, or advanced persistent threat (APT). In this case, however, the “ghost” hacker goes rogue and is wanted for “stock manipulation, espionage, political engineering, terrorism, and invasion of cyber brain privacy.”

This is the basic premise of the Japanese cult classic anime”Ghost in the Shellwhich marked its 30th anniversary this week since its debut and was based on the chapters titled “Bye Bye Clay” and “Ghost Coast” from the first volume of the manga of the same name, was released in May 1989.

To say that the Puppet Master story was ahead of its time might be an understatement. The World Wide Web, essentially what evolved from the internet as we know it today, was invented in 1989, the same year the first volume of the “Ghost in the Shell” manga — including the Puppet Master story — hit newsstands in Japan. (The World Wide Web went public in 1991.)

A scene from the Ghost in the Shell manga, depicting an official from Public Security Division 6 and the Puppet TheaterImage Credits:TechCrunch screenshot

In the manga, when Puppet Master is caught, an employee from Public Security Division 6, an agency under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, explains that they have been hunting the hacker “for a long time” and “profiled his behavioral tendencies and code/technology patterns”.

“As a result, we were finally able to create a special attack barrier against the puppets,” the official says in the manga.

At the risk of extrapolating too much from a few sentences, the reality is that what the official describes is basically what cybersecurity companies, like antivirus companies, do every day to stop malware. Not only do they create the so-called signatures based on the malware’s code, but also based on its behavior and properties, known as heuristics.

There are other plot elements that proved prescient.

At the beginning of Puppet Master’s investigation, Major Motoko Kusanagi, the protagonist and commander of the anti-terrorist unit Section 9, breaks into the Sewer Department’s network to locate a garbage truck. (These days, government hackers working for intelligence agencies often break into large networks to spy on specific individual targets, rather than extract data from the breached network itself.)

While this is happening, one of the scavengers confesses to his colleague that he hacked his wife’s cyberspace because he believes she is cheating on him. Soon after, we find out that he was using a computer virus that he got from “some programmer”. This is a clear case of domestic abuse through technology, or even stalkerware, which TechCrunch has investigated extensively over the past few years.

As it turns out, the abusive scavenger didn’t have a wife. His memories were all made up. Of ghost — essentially his mind or consciousness — was hacked by Marionette with the goal of using it to hack government officials. In a way, this is similar to what some advanced hackers do when they break into networks that they then use to hack their real target, as a way to cover their tracks by adding separation from themselves and the ultimate target.

Puppet Master as a government hacker, hacking networks to track targets or use them to attack other networks, and a jealousy-fueled hack aren’t the only exciting pieces of speculative fiction related to anime hacking.

John Wilander, a cybersecurity veteran who writes hacker fiction books, wrote exhaustive analysis of the film which highlighted details that refer to real-life scenarios. Wilander gave examples such as hackers reusing known exploits or malware to make performance more difficult, researching malware without notifying the creators and infecting themselves with it, and using computers for industrial espionage.

Obviously, the manga and anime take the basic – and realistic – premise of the Puppet Master as a hacker in more fantastical directions. The hacker, who turns out to be an advanced AI, can control people through their cyber brains and is self-aware to the point where — spoiler alert — he applies for political asylum and ends up suggesting that Kusanagi merge theghosts”, essentially their mind.

A still from “Ghost in the Shell”, specifically the scene where the puppeteer and Major Kusanagi mergeImage Credits:Screenshot/YouTube

To understand how prophetic “Ghost in the Shell” was, it’s important to put it in its historical context. In 1989 and 1995, cyber security was not even a word yet, although the term “cyberspaceit was famously coined by science fiction writer William Gibson in his classic book, Neuromancer.

Computer security, or information security, however, was already a reality, and had been for a few decades, but it was a highly specialized specialty in computer science.

The first computer virus is believed to be the Creeper worm, which was released in 1971 on Arpanet, the government-developed network that became the precursor to the Internet. A handful of other viruses and worms wreaked havoc after that, before becoming ubiquitous when the Internet and World Wide Web became a reality.

Perhaps the first documented government spying campaign on the Internet was the one he discovered Clifford Stolla trainee astronomer who also managed the computers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California. In 1986, Stoll noticed a 75-cent accounting error on the network, which eventually led him to discover that a hacker had broken into the lab’s systems. In the end, the hacker was tracked down and found to be feeding information from the lab and other US government networks to the KGB of the Soviet Union.

Stoll captured his many months of meticulous and painstaking research in the book “The Cuckoo’s Egg,” a first-person account that reads like a very detailed and extensive report by security researchers analyzing a hacking campaign carried out by government hackers.

As far as I can tell, “Ghost in the Shell” creator Masamune Shirow has never spoken about the real-life events that inspired the hacking plot points in the manga. But it’s clear that he was paying attention to what, at the time, was a hidden world foreign to most people on Earth, who were still years away from being online, let alone knowing the existence of hackers.

Anime classic cyber security Cybersecurity Future ghost Ghost In The Shell hacker Hacking manga predicted science fiction Shell years
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleLegally troubled AI-powered music startup Suno raises $2.45B valuation on $200M revenue
Next Article Amazon’s Prime Video is getting AI-generated video recaps for some TV shows
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

France to abandon Windows for Linux to reduce dependence on US technology

10 April 2026

VeraCrypt encryption software developer says Windows users may experience startup problems after Microsoft shuts down its account

10 April 2026

Hackers steal and leak sensitive LAPD police documents

9 April 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

TechCrunch is headed to Tokyo — and it’s bringing the Startup Battlefield with it

10 April 2026

France to abandon Windows for Linux to reduce dependence on US technology

10 April 2026

Volkswagen begins testing its self-driving minibuses in Los Angeles ahead of launch with Uber

10 April 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

Cash app launches ‘pay later’ feature for P2P transfers

3 April 2026

Doss raises $55 million for AI inventory management that connects to ERP

24 March 2026

Despite stiff competition, Kalshi, Polymarket CEOs back $35m VC fund projections

23 March 2026
Startups

What founders can learn from Anjuna’s layoffs and recovery

Former Tesla engineer’s startup taps Pronto to help automate a copper mine

Databricks co-founder wins prestigious ACM award, says ‘AGI is already here’

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.