This paper examines contemporary society through the concept of algorithmic hyper-late modernity, a new phase emerging from the convergence of digital technologies and global mobilities. Rather than viewing the digital revolution as a purely technological development, it conceptualizes it as a profound transformation of social systems, everyday life, and modes of human existence. Drawing on both classical and contemporary sociological theory, the paper situates this transformation in relation to earlier phases of modernity and late modernity, engaging with thinkers such as Durkheim, Giddens, Jameson, and Elliott. It further analyzes how social media platforms, algorithmic infrastructures, and artificial intelligence increasingly mediate political processes, public opinion, affective dynamics, and risk. The paper also advances the concept of Mobilities 3.0 to describe a condition in which mobility becomes deeply entangled with digital systems, generating algorithmic forms of movement, communication, subjectivity, and governance that operate across national borders. The paper concludes by arguing that human life is now constituted within networks linking humans and technologies, rather than in opposition to them. In this context, the humanities play a crucial role in critically reflecting on these transformations and in articulating ethical boundaries for human life in the age of artificial intelligence.