• smnwcj@fedia.io
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    3 months ago

    It’s concerning how this pseudoscience is getting so much traction, and we’ll be left with a bunch of nonsensical privacy regulation. Granted I’m happy to err towards too much privacy regulation, but can imagine other privacy issues getting less traction.

    • marcie (she/her)@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      It isnt pseudoscience, theres some papers out there on locked in syndrome and they have a system that is very good at reading thoughts with something like 75-85% accuracy. Requires very sophisticated and large equipment to use though, and it has to be trained on each person individually (through things like yes/no answers with blinks or focusing on saying one word, so its not some sort of thing that can just be automatically done, it requires a great deal of consent and concentration on part of the staff and the patient). Its very possible this could be downsized and made more available in the decades to come, its still in the early phases.

    • TheBigBrother@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      Maybe this isn’t pseudoscience anymore… I must admit I need to see these stuff working in person to believe it but according to the video this is definetly interesting at least or it could open a new era in human civilization.

        • TheBigBrother@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 months ago

          I believe it should work with some kind of brain waves(telepathy?), apparently some kind of device you put in your head and it read information from your brain, the spooky question would be if there is a way to make a device like that to be able to read information from someone’s brain remotely. IDK this looks like a bad idea but anyway it’s already here, according to the information I believe there will be more places where law get updated about it.

          Edit: maybe it could be used for interrogation also, I mean you could know if someone it’s saying the truth or not by reading their brain.

          • LostXOR@fedia.io
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            3 months ago

            Reading thoughts remotely is a no-go, you need very precise measurements of the brain’s electrical activity and that just can’t be done with distant sensors.

            • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              No, the sensor will be in the brain, it will just transmit encrypted packets of the information it collects over WiFi or microwave.

              If they can read your brain, this is a very simple exercise

            • TheBigBrother@lemmy.worldOP
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              3 months ago

              Maybe there are people who have more powerful brain waves or something… like some kind of abnormality who can make they more likely to be remote targets…

              • LostXOR@fedia.io
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                3 months ago

                I’m no expert in biology but the way I understand it our brains all work in roughly the same way, so I don’t think that would be possible.

              • sparkle@lemm.ee
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                3 months ago

                Brains transmit/change state (a.k.a. think) using electricity. It’s basically a flesh computer. You can’t read thoughts without being able to measure the brain’s electrical/chemical activity. If you had any theoretically possible mind-reading (and by extension mind-controlling) technology, it would still need to physically connect to your neurons or something…

                That being said, I don’t imagine it’d be too hard for sci-fi future folk to stick a chip in every newborn’s brain from the get-go. But that’s a future too far from now, we’ll all be dead by then probably.

  • sweetpotato@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    This has to be the most dystopian thing I’ve ever read. If the rich and the elites have the power to read our thoughts (outside of a lab) with 80-90% accuracy, I genuinely don’t know what the point of living will be. Our eternal enslavement will be completed, they could control our emotions, desires and needs, we would literally become animals.

  • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    You’re going to have to drag my corpse into a lab to put any neuro any-fucking-thing in or on my head.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    3 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Advances in artificial intelligence are leading to medical breakthroughs once thought impossible, including devices that can actually read minds and alter our brains.

    Pauzaskie says our brain waves are like encrypted signals and, using artificial intelligence, researchers have identified frequencies for specific words to turn thought to text with 40% accuracy, “Which, give it a few years, we’re probably talking 80-90%.”

    Researchers are now working to reverse the conditions by using electrical stimulation to alter the frequencies or regions of the brain where they originate.

    But while medical research facilities are subject to privacy laws, private companies - that are amassing large caches of brain data - are not.

    The vast majority of them also don’t disclose where the data is stored, how long they keep it, who has access to it, and what happens if there’s a security breach…

    With companies and countries racing to access, analyze, and alter our brains, Pauzauskie suggests, privacy protections should be a no-brainer, "It’s everything that we are.


    The original article contains 796 words, the summary contains 165 words. Saved 79%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • epigone@awful.systems
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    3 months ago

    mmo festive “sexual” cartesian theatres coming for disney world from japan with loving kindness