First, Welcome!
That seed pod is still some way from being ripe. However, orchid seeds are teensy - like dust. In nature they require specific microrrhizae to germinate, since they are so small that they have no nutrients of their own. In cultivation, they can be propagated on agar media with the correct nutrients, but need to be grown under sterile conditions best achieved in a laboratory. So... the short answer is, you are very unlikely to be able to get from seeds to new plants without laboratory equipment. If you want to let that see capsule reach maturity, it's interesting to see what those orchid seeds look like. (When my plants get "knocked up" by insects or hummingbirds or the wind, I just remove the seed pod so that the plant doesn't put energy into it... your choice, doesn't hurt anything to leave it)
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