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Brain Implants and Remote Control - Zuckerberg Style




Personally, not sure. I could foresee all kinds of good applications for them, not the least of which is treating mental illness and people who have suffered from a brain injury. And commercially, they are likely to become the next thing people "can't do without", much like how smartphones are now.
I imagine that before I die, they will become mainstream, and I might cave to pressure because I need help with my memory or some such thing :)

From the document.
"One recent project is a wireless brain implant that can record, stimulate, and disrupt the movement of a monkey in real time.
...
The Wand could “sense” when the primate was about to move the joystick and stop that movement with a targeted electric signal sent to the right part of its brain, Muller said. And since the machine was wireless, the monkey didn’t need to be physically confined or attached to anything for it to work.
“This device is game-changing in the sense that you could have a subject that’s completely free-moving and it would autonomously, or automatically, know” when and how to disrupt its movement, said Muller."
Just implant the prisoner population and ensure they can't move out of a location and save money on prison walls.


Would I have them? At my age, no.


From the document.
"One recent project is a wireless brain implant that can record, stimulate, and disrupt the movement of a monkey in real time.
...
The Wand could “sense” when the..."
Ah, I see. And yes, if the implants that were placed in a human brain were subject to external control, there could be terrible abuses. Except that any attempt to use them that way would inevitably be discovered and to the full-scale destruction of the company and the implants themselves. It does make for an awesome dystopian sci-fi novel though :)
As for prisoners, that is actually a very likely application. If you recall, I used a similar idea in my first book, the "spike", which arrested aggressive behavior. I had a chapter in which one malfunctions, but the editor told me to cut back and I had to remove it.

Sadly, most people wouldn't have a problem with that if it were actually implemented...

Indeed, I do.
Precisely.

Yes, I guess those who use it would become susceptible to being controlled, but it's probably gonna be a two way street. Imagine being able to control (many) things remotely exclusively by a brain power.
Is a nuclear bomb good or bad?

Well said. Neural implants are predicted to become the replacement for every digital device we currently use - a smartphone, IM system, GPS and navigation, internet search engine, email, and augmented/virtual reality. It's not a question of whether they are right or wrong, I think, but when they will become a reality. Because, let's face it, there's no preventing new technologies from becoming available unless the harm they do outweighs the good. And how does one prove that?
Is there any such thing as a technology that is not morally ambiguous? I like Nik's example of nuclear bombs. Can anyone think of an argument in which they are no good, and for any reason?

However, apart from that, I agree mainly with Matthew. It is like Pandora's box - once the technology is discovered it cannot be put back in the box. If it works, it will be used. For those worried by it, you don't have to accept the implant.

"I know some will maintain that nukes have prevented WW III,"
I am on of those and I was hoping someone would say that, thanks :) The same holds for the alien invaders scenario. I can't personally think of any other argument in defense of nuclear armaments, especially when you consider the cost of maintaining a nuclear arsenal.
There's also the argument that without it's nuclear arsenal, Israel would have been overrun and destroyed by now. Not sure if I'm one of those people, mainly because Israel started testing nukes since the 1960s, during which two wars happened (1967 and 1973) and none thereafter.

I have a tendency to agree with you Matt, however i'm deeply suspicious of anyone having direct and potentially irrevocable access to my brain.
On the otherhand, I was asked the question, would I take a NI if it made me smarter? And, what would I do if all my collegues took it too, would I be willing to be left behind?
I didn't have an answer for that.

Yep, that's what we're dealing with, and it what's makes the future scary, isn't it? There are many great unknowns we'll be getting into thanks to the rapidly-advancing pace of technological change. I do think dystopian scenarios are a bit naive, but they are instructional and necessary (and entertaining!) because they get us thinking about the issue.
Speaking of which, anyone here familiar with the technological singularity?

To me dystopian scenarios amount to 'risk identification,' activities and I think have more value then you imply.
It strikes me that our growing scientific/technical power as a species has multiple pathways forward that end badly for us.
I would include scientific/technical risk of something 'new,' disrupting society to such an extent that it crashes fatally as a real possibility that needs to be identified and mitigated.
On the flip side, where I work does cutting edge technology as well. I'm kinda right in this stuff.


Take the case of hackers. Tools used to diagnose and fix IT systems were misused to gain unauthorised access or leave backdoors and faults. Now criminals or just the curious can use the same tools and techniques to gain access/steal data etc.
Implants are coming - all the technology paths demonstrate they are not far off. We already have some enablers. Take the humble hearing aid. Useful for the hard of hearing and even the clinically deaf but how does a deaf person know that what is being broadcast to them via the aid is actually what is being said.
If that is a direct brain implant but connected to the outside world then any use, storage, comms, health monitoring could be taken over by malcontents. We have always had misuses of technology in support of greed by criminals or abuses of power - we always will.


You can certainly make devices as receivers only; however, one of the uses mentioned earlier was communication which tends to be a two way process (I'll exclude current incumbent of white house who seems to be in permanent transmit - dodgy relay I suspect on his Putin control unit - wrong thread)
Yes read only for medical data but what about if drug dosage is required that implies a transmission to deliver the drugs.


The same thing will hold true with genetic alterations...Once people start creating embryos designed to produce smarter children, bigger children, faster children, or whatever, it will become an arms race as people get into it just so their children aren't left behind...



Designing humans is an interesting question. Is it wrong to have children free of really bad genetic defects that will just cause much pain and suffering? Is it wrong to have children who will live their lives cancer free? The problem is that sooner or later people will start designing for all sorts of things that we really don't need, and also while learning to do, they make some awful mistakes. It seems to me to be one of those things we shouldn't allow, but in principle could be quite valuable if used in very specific ways.



As of genetic arms race - I guess it's interesting enough to have a dedicated thread

Remind me to sue China for that, and Black Mirror. Years ago, I heard about this very idea and did a short story about a social credit system, basically a reputation index that people relied on the way they do their current credit scores.
I accuse China of plagiarism! ;)

That's the fear that genomic manipulation presents. However, the applications for it are for removing genetic diseases and anticipating future health problems. Cosmetic changes are what people fear will happen, which you clearly get because you mentioned how its a "slippery slope". However, I don't think anyone would say no to genetic modifications if they found out their infant would be born with a terrible condition or was more likely to suffer from heart problems, mental illness, etc.

I'd love to see someone successfully sue China for an IP breach.

..."
This problem of the 'dual nature,' of technical advance..... There is a recurring theme of any advance being used for good or evil.
There may well have been someone who said something like, "Wow! I've just mastered fire, now I can warm my family when it's cold, ward off predators, and cook my food..."
and then a day later. "Ha Ha Ha... Now I can watch my enemies burn..."


Yeah, that was sarcasm, Ian. Not in a million years would I assume that the state of China actually read a short story of mine and adopted policy based on it. That's why I added a wink emoji at the end.

..."
This problem ..."
Absolutely. The question is, on balance, how have technological advances affected us overall? Would we not claim that the discovery of fire, the development of the printing press, industry, personal computers and the internet all been to the benefit of humanity? Seriously, would we claim that? I know I would, but I'd like to hear counter-arguments on that front.

Yeah, Matthew, I picked that. What I was curious about the emoji was the semicolon - did you intend one eye to be weeping?


No, Ian, that's an eye winking. It's called a winky, which indicates you are kidding. And do you mean to say you "picked up on that"? Because, if you knew I was being sarcastic, why did you go into an explanation of why I couldn't sue? It genuinely seemed to me like you thought I was serious.
Either or, no harm no foul. I genuinely wish I could sue, but Black Mirror would be my only real target :)


Hey, no worries. I would be curious too. So the issue of a social credit system, how would one pair that with brain implants. I seem to recall someone saying something about that.


I know exactly what you're talking about. These days, they are called the New Democratic Party, but Social Credit is how they got their start. It's very cool you got to see that, I don't get to hear from people who witnessed those days very much. The Social Credit Party was intrinsic to the history of the Canadian west and kind of got forgotten in the conservative revolution of the 1980s.
Anyway, in this case, the social credit system refers to a digital ranking system that comes down to how esteemed a person is. It's an amalgamation of a person's credit score, financial history, online behavior (do they look at porn, etc.), their posts on social media, and how other people rate their interactions with them regularly. You distill that down to a score - 1-10 or out of 100 or 1000 - and you have a person's social credit score or reputation score.
Basically, its like gossip and word of mouth on steroids, and accelerated by a factor of 100.


1.) Planned obsolescence
Consider the rate of obsolescence which we have observed in personal electronics over the past few decades. Now apply that to a gadget which is effectively part of your brain. I imagine that there would be people rushing to swap out part of their cortexes the same way that they stand in line for the latest Apple iPhone. There would also be people who either refused or couldn't afford to upgrade, what would become of them? Would corporations still send mandatory OS updates that nerfed/killed older models?
2.) Social engineering
The amount of personal information that is being harvested and used against us is already staggering. From our clicks and view times the companies who are watching can deduce our preferences, education, health, finances, IQ and personality traits better than we can. While the tech is seperate from our physical bodies we can choose to walk away or limit our interactions to direct business matters. This option disappears once you are wired to it. Imagine the possibilities of a society which cannot turn off Fox News/MSNBC. Could you raise propoganda to the level of outright memetic warfare? Have we already seen the opening shots of such conflicts during recent elections?
REF: https://www.businessinsider.com.au/ch...
Any thoughts?