World, Writing, Wealth discussion
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Implications of this experiment with mind-controlled rats?
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Scenario 2: Homeless people are nabbed off the street. Wired for external control and used to clean toxic chemical waste from a spill. The controllers are safe a 1000 miles away. The homeless people die in droves, but in the end the spill is fully cleaned up. One of the controllers grows a conscience and decides to shaft the company the next time around.
Scenario 3: A charming, charismatic presidential candidate is wired for control by a nefarious billionaire. His candidate wins the election in a landslide. The billionaire uses his control to initiate a number of policies that benefit the rich at the expense of everyone else. An investigative journalist uncovers the plot and publishes her story - she is not believed and is ridiculed by her boss. Fired, she is then hunted by corporate assassins.
Scenario 4: A nefarious religious cult leader wires his devotees for control, and with explosive vests. He marches them into a major sporting event and explodes all of them in a major terrorist incident killing 1000s. One of the devotees has 2nd thoughts on the way to the stadium but is unable to extract the implants in time.
Scenario 5: Young, attractive men and women are recruited to be 'sex-bots.' They sign up for remote control at a high-class brothel in NYC run for the wall-street elite. They have no memories of what happens, but all their college tuition fees are paid, and they have a healthy bank balance at the end of their degree. Some mysteriously disappear never to be seen again.

No. 3 - Think that experiment has already started with an older test subject :-/


Well, given that the tech is a unifying factor - one could wrap all the scenario's into a single world....



If the brain or even muscle memory could result in being retained, I could see positive uses for it. The ability to learn new skills.

It is creepy.



Along the lines of what Papaphilly mentioned. I recently saw a medical drama episode (New Amersterdam, I think) where they did things to the brain that then allowed the person to do things. In this case, to make the connect they used a flight program as the guy was a pilot, and the muscle memory allowed him to finally connect to the medical device and implants to give him more quality of life.
All new tech has good and evil uses. I can see it used for training from military to pilots to driving a car, where muscle memory reacts faster than thought. Reflexes can be trained to be faster. Perhaps for Alzeheimer's patients, such tech could be used to help them care for themselves longer.
Yes, we can all think of evil uses by scientists and governments. I just don't think it is innately evil. Nuclear energy can bomb cities or power them.

Cyborg wetware interface.
Agree with Lizzie. This has tremendous potential for good and evil.


That is the course of all human history. If we hadn't invented indoor plumbing, maybe we wouldn't have TP hoarders.
Use your imagination. What's next?