CyborgText names a textual condition in which writing is no longer addressed exclusively to the human reader. Within Anto Lloveras’ Socioplastics, the text acquires a hybrid anatomy: prose, metadata, tags, identifiers, hyperlinks, indexing structures, and recurrent lexical operators coexist within the same publishing act. Reading therefore becomes only one of several possible forms of access. A text may be interpreted, searched, parsed, cited, harvested, embedded, recombined, or rediscovered by systems that do not read in the conventional sense. This does not diminish the role of authorship. It complicates it. The author must now compose for multiple agencies at once, balancing semantic depth with machine addressability and conceptual precision with infrastructural persistence. A title can function as argument, identifier, search surface, and database entry simultaneously. A recurring operator can carry philosophical meaning for a reader while also acting as a stable token across a distributed corpus. The 6,000-plus-node architecture of Socioplastics makes this hybridity unavoidable. At such scale, purely human navigation becomes insufficient; yet purely computational organisation would flatten nuance. CyborgText occupies the productive tension between both regimes. Its significance lies precisely there. The text is no longer a finished object delivered to an audience, but a semi-autonomous component capable of circulating across human and non-human systems. CyborgText therefore redefines publication as the construction of artefacts that can survive translation between cognition, databases, platforms, archives, and future forms of machine interpretation.