
About
Correction Protocol is a speculative video work inspired by the logic of anomaly-detection games. The project follows a remote operator tasked with monitoring domestic surveillance feeds and identifying inconsistencies before they are automatically “corrected” by an artificial continuity system. Across repeated observations, small anomalies begin to accumulate: photographs alter, objects disappear, voice and sound delays, and architectural spaces subtly reorganize themselves. As the system continues stabilizing reality, the distinction between correction and fabrication gradually collapses. Using surveillance aesthetics, generated image variations, and recursive archive structures, the work explores a near future in which algorithmic systems prioritize coherence and perceptual stability over ambiguity, memory, or truth. Rather than depicting technological failure as catastrophe, Correction Protocol focuses on quieter forms of unreality: procedural systems that continuously edit the world in order to maintain continuity.