Big Brother Is Employing You

Hello, worker drone number 54234. You are the perfect viewpoint into our insanely oppressive dystopian society, because you are our dystopian society. Or at least powering it.

Therefore, you are very likely to be the main character of a work of fiction about this society. Because we don't want that, you will be terminated 23 and a half seconds after your Heel Realization.

Have a nice day.

See Rage Within the Machine.

Anime & Manga

 * Edward and Alphonse Elric, as well as Roy Mustang and his staff, all work for the oppressive Amestrian military in Fullmetal Alchemist.
 * Well, Al doesn't actually work for them. He just follows Ed around everywhere, who does in fact work for them.
 * Pumpkin Scissors is a Spiritual Successor to Fullmetal Alchemist and similarly features a squad of heroes within a corrupt army.
 * Some might say that Section 9 serves a similar purpose in the Ghost in the Shell universe, given how they're more or less the 'net police/swat for Japan.
 * Both Yomiko and the Paper Sisters in the Read or Die franchise start off this way.
 * Claire and the other Claymores in Claymore
 * Re-l and Vincent  in Ergo Proxy
 * While Kirihara of Darker than Black is very much good, her bosses certainly aren't, and several episodes indicate she has at least some awareness of this.
 * And on one of the other sides of the Melee a Trois of government conspiracies and Spy-Versus-Spy and suchlike, we have Hei, working for The Syndicate. Hell, in the Breather Episode before the Grand Finale of the first season, they both get disgusted with their bosses and, thanks to a convenient accident, end up hanging out together, which included a lengthy discussion of what it's like to feel like your employers are just using you as a pawn.
 * Suzaku Kururugi from Code Geass.
 * In Yu-Gi-Oh! SEVENS, almost all of the protagonists work for or used to work for the Goha Corp in some way; in fact, the whole plot starts when Yūga programs Rush Duels into the system before resigning his post, the Goha Corp's biggest goal trying to undo it.

Audio Adaptation

 * The main character of the rather disturbing Big Finish Doctor Who audio "The Natural History of Fear" is the Editor. He... edits people.

Film

 * In The Lives of Others, the main character is a Stasi agent, keeping the people of East Germany under surveillance.
 * In Equilibrium, John Preston is the top Grammaton Cleric, responsible for tracking down and bringing to justice "sense offenders," the opponents of the Tetragrammaton Council, the government of Libria.
 * In Terry Gilliam's Brazil, Sam Lowry (Jonathan Pryce) works for the Ministry of Information Processing. God help him when he gets unavoidably tangled in the toils of Information Retrieval... It's strongly implied that everyone works for central services i.e. the state.
 * Charlton Heston's character in Soylent Green was a police detective, so he technically worked for the oppressive state that was feeding poor people to poor people.
 * The cast of Silent Running all worked for the government that ordered them to destroy the last preserved ecosystems.
 * John Anderton in Minority Report
 * Inspector Finch in V for Vendetta
 * Logan from Logan's Run, before he starts running. Big Brother in this case is the city's mainframe computer, which implements population controls.

Literature

 * Winston Smith in Nineteen Eighty-Four works for the Ministry of Truth. The book invented the term "Big Brother" and is thus the trope namer.
 * Played with in Brave New World: Bernard Marx works for the government like everyone else... except for the Savage, who becomes the protagonist for the second half of the book.
 * Fahrenheit 451: The protagonist starts out as a book burner for the government.
 * Richard Decker in Do Androids Dream of Electronic Sheep and the movie it (loosely) became, Blade Runner.
 * In fact, lots of Philip K. Dick books and stories can work for this one. The Penultimate Truth (maybe, depending on how you interpret the crazy, drugged-out second half), The Minority Report and We Can Remember It For You Wholesale which became the movie Total Recall.
 * The books by Karin Lowachee. While Captain Azarcon isn't the narrator in any of the books, he can undoubtedly be considered the protagonist. And he's a captain of a large space carrier for a government which invaded an alien lunar colony, started a war, and then re-started the war out of prejudice and bigotry when he tried to end it. Needless to stay, he
 * Arguably, most of the characters in Warhammer 40,000 tie-in novels, from Ravenor to Eisenhorn to Gaunt of Gaunt's Ghosts.
 * D-503 in We.
 * The main character in The Giver is being trained to take a role in perpetuating the dystopia they all live in.
 * Chip, in This Perfect Day, works in a genetics lab identifying gene samples as part of the evil supercomputer's plan to genetically-engineer the human race into identical, interchangeable sameness. His grandfather, Papa Jan, actually helped BUILD the evil supercomputer, but later regretted it.
 * The protagonist of the Robert A. Heinlein novella If This Goes On (also known as Revolt In 2100) is one of the guards at the HQ of the Corrupt Church that rules a dystopian future America.
 * The government of Earth goes through some Dystopic stages in The Forever War, and the main characters are soldiers.
 * In a way, Miles Vorkosigan and his friends. While it's definitely reformed significantly and he is continuing that process, Barayar was The Evil Empire a generation ago and is still viewed that way by many people.
 * In this case, Miles is also literally working for his big brother, given that The Emperor is his five-years-older foster brother.
 * Thursday Next makes efforts to change the Mega Corp-run Crap Saccharine World England in which she lives, but still works for its government.
 * In The Other Side of the Island by Allegra Goodman, the world is run by a sort of Peace and Love Incorporated, called Earth Mother. Honor's mother ends up working for them when she decides to rebel against the government.
 * The eponymous Jen from Jennifer Government works for the government, but that's not the dystopian power in the novel. Meanwhile, beta protagonists Hack Nike and Billy Betchel (later Billy NRA) work for the dystopian corporate clusters, Hack for Nike (the main antagonist in the novel) while Billy is the muscle.
 * Tracer by Stuart Jackson, set in a 1999 Britain controlled by a neo-fascist government as a result of the AIDS crisis. The protagonist is a policeman whose job is to track down AIDS carriers.
 * Blind Faith by Ben Elton features, as its hero, Trafford, who works for Nat Dat, the National Data Bank, which knows everything about everyone. Almost everyone works for Nat Dat in one way or another.
 * Everyone in Matched works for the government, because everything is controlled by the government.
 * In Fred Saberhagen's Empire of the East, Chup of the North was one of the evil Empire's most effective warrior leaders ... until the Empire demanded that, in order to get promoted to the next higher rank, he had to prove that he could act in a cowardly and treacherous way. "You must be for once not brave, but cowardly.... It will be difficult only once." Betraying someone who genuinely trusted him turned out to be too difficult for Chup to do even once.

Tabletop RPG

 * Paranoia. In most of the official products your Player Character is a Troubleshooter who works for The Computer, the paranoid, repressive dictator of Alpha Complex.
 * SLA Industries. The PC's are Operatives who work for some branch of the title company, which is the brutal, corrupt government of the Worlds of Progress.
 * Warhammer 40,000. To serve the Imperium is to be a servant of the the cruelest and most bloody regime imaginable. It says so right on the box. Exactly how brutal it is varies, but even in the best cases you can never be sure a bunch of amazingly nasty creatures and/or a particularly crazy Inquisitor won't drop in and mess everything up. And wherever enforcement is lax, it only ends in far worse things finding a foothold. At least the official bosses rarely can afford to watch anything outside a few sensitive areas, and Mechanicus, while much more capable, have its own priorities, so it's only a problem for their workers (then again, in Dark Heresy there are rumours about spy network of the Lords Dragon extending to all implants). So mostly it's high-ranked Imperial authorities (like Inquisition or Sector command) who watch each other and powers slightly below their level (especially planetary Governors for the signs of sedition).

Video Games

 * In Deus Ex, JC Denton begins the game working for the puppet organization of the Secret Masters.
 * Additionally, depending on which ending the player gets, he may.
 * In Mass Effect 2, the Illusive Man, brings Commander Shepard back from death and equips him with everything he needs to help him defeat the lackeys of the Reapers, who want to destroy all organic life in the galaxy. Once the Collectors are defeated
 * However, this outcome was completely predictable less than half an hour into the game when you first meet his Ceberus agents.
 * Happens on occasion in Final Fantasy.
 * Cecil starts out as pretty much The Dragon until he realizes that his king is being more evil than usual (too late for many towns, unfortunately)
 * Terra and Celes start out Final Fantasy VI as generals for The Empire, though the former was brainwashed.
 * Terra wasn't ever actually named as a general, though it's clear she was fairly high-ranking in the Empire due to her status. However, the fact that she had a Slave Crown placed on her makes it fairly evident that she can't have been that high-ranking.
 * Zack spends most of Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII working for Shinra.
 * Midway through Final Fantasy XIII, Lightning realizes that
 * Red Faction is about a rebellion of Martian miners oppressed by the corrupt Mega Corp Ultor Mining.
 * Gordon Freeman of the Half Life in a certain way? In Half-Life 2, the GMan makes it no secret that he puts Freeman into a position where everything he does to help his friend, will also further the GMans own mysterious plans. Episode 2 reveals that
 * X-COM has you playing as the top-secret transnational Government Conspiracy attempting to cover up an alien invasion, with secret labs full of captured technology and space monsters, and squads of heavily armed commandos and psychic MIBs delivered around the world via Black Helicopter… Or at least that's what you aspire to.

Web Original

 * Fatebane in Associated Space is a government agent of the Terran Associated States.

Machinima

 * Red vs. Blue: The Reds, the Blues, the Freelancers and Doc are working for Project Freelancer, at least until Reconstruction where the Project and its Director are brought down by some of them.