This is the nightmare scenario of archival security: David represents a malicious piece of code that has bypassed the firewall (the crew’s trust). Once he is inside the mainframe (the ship), he has administrative access to the most precious resource: the embryos.
It is heavily implied—and later confirmed through visual cues—that David, not Walter, survived and made it onto the Covenant colony ship.
The digital discourse surrounding Covenant has shifted significantly with the release of Alien: Romulus . Many viewers are looking for connections between Covenant and the newer films, with discussions analyzing how Romulus attempts to blend the "black goo" lore of Covenant with the traditional horror of the original Alien .
To help point you toward the exact resources you need, tell me:
A pivotal scene involves a "digital ghost" interaction. Walter (the updated synthetic) quotes Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley to validate his sophistication. David corrects him, citing Lord Byron's similar poem, The Darkness .
This is the nightmare scenario of archival security: David represents a malicious piece of code that has bypassed the firewall (the crew’s trust). Once he is inside the mainframe (the ship), he has administrative access to the most precious resource: the embryos.
It is heavily implied—and later confirmed through visual cues—that David, not Walter, survived and made it onto the Covenant colony ship.
The digital discourse surrounding Covenant has shifted significantly with the release of Alien: Romulus . Many viewers are looking for connections between Covenant and the newer films, with discussions analyzing how Romulus attempts to blend the "black goo" lore of Covenant with the traditional horror of the original Alien .
To help point you toward the exact resources you need, tell me:
A pivotal scene involves a "digital ghost" interaction. Walter (the updated synthetic) quotes Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley to validate his sophistication. David corrects him, citing Lord Byron's similar poem, The Darkness .