Before a car crash in 2008 left her paralysed from the neck down, Nancy Smith enjoyed playing the piano. Years later, Smith started making music again, thanks to an implant that recorded and analysed her brain activity. When she imagined playing an on-screen keyboard, her brain–computer interface (BCI) translated her thoughts into keystrokes — and simple melodies, such as 'Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star', rang out
But there was a twist. For Smith, it seemed as if the piano played itself. "It felt like the keys just automatically hit themselves without me thinking about it," she said at the time. "It just seemed like it knew the tune, and it just did it on its own."
Smith's BCI system, implanted as part of a clinical trial, trained on her brain signals as she imagined playing the keyboard. That learning enabled the system to detect her intention to play hundreds of milliseconds before she consciously attempted to do so, says trial leader Richard Andersen, a neuroscientist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
[...] Andersen's research also illustrates the potential of BCIs that access areas outside the motor cortex. "The surprise was that when we go into the posterior parietal, we can get signals that are mixed together from a large number of areas," says Andersen. "There's a wide variety of things that we can decode."
The ability of these devices to access aspects of a person's innermost life, including preconscious thought, raises the stakes on concerns about how to keep neural data private. It also poses ethical questions about how neurotechnologies might shape people's thoughts and actions — especially when paired with artificial intelligence.
Meanwhile, AI is enhancing the capabilities of wearable consumer products that record signals from outside the brain. Ethicists worry that, left unregulated, these devices could give technology companies access to new and more precise data about people's internal reactions to online and other content.
Ethicists and BCI developers are now asking how previously inaccessible information should be handled and used. "Whole-brain interfacing is going to be the future," says Tom Oxley, chief executive of Synchron, a BCI company in New York City. He predicts that the desire to treat psychiatric conditions and other brain disorders will lead to more brain regions being explored. Along the way, he says, AI will continue to improve decoding capabilities and change how these systems serve their users. "It leads you to the final question: how do we make that safe?"
[...] Although accurate user numbers are hard to gather, many thousands of enthusiasts are already using neurotech headsets. And ethicists say that a big tech company could suddenly catapult the devices to widespread use. Apple, for example, patented a design for EEG sensors for future use in its Airpods wireless earphones in 2023.
Yet unlike BCIs aimed at the clinic, which are governed by medical regulations and privacy protections, the consumer BCI space has little legal oversight, says David Lyreskog, an ethicist at the University of Oxford, UK. "There's a wild west when it comes to the regulatory standards," he says.
In 2018, Ienca and his colleagues found that most consumer BCIs don't use secure data-sharing channels or implement state-of-the-art privacy technologies2. "I believe that has not changed," Ienca says. What's more, a 2024 analysis3 of the data policies of 30 consumer neurotech companies by the Neurorights Foundation, a non-profit organization in New York City, showed that nearly all had complete control over the data users provided. That means most firms can use the information as they please, including selling it.
Responding to such concerns, the government of Chile and the legislators of four US states have passed laws that give direct recordings of any form of nerve activity protected status. But Ienca and Nita Farahany, an ethicist at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, fear that such laws are insufficient because they focus on the raw data and not on the inferences that companies can make by combining neural information with parallel streams of digital data. Inferences about a person's mental health, say, or their political allegiances could still be sold to third parties and used to discriminate against or manipulate a person.
"The data economy, in my view, is already quite privacy-violating and cognitive- liberty-violating," Ienca says. Adding neural data, he says, "is like giving steroids to the existing data economy".
Several key international bodies, including the United Nations cultural organization UNESCO and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, have issued guidelines on these issues. Furthermore, in September, three US senators introduced an act that would require the Federal Trade Commission to review how data from neurotechnology should be protected.
Heading to the clinicWhile their development advances at pace, so far no implanted BCI has been approved for general clinical use. Synchron's device is closest to the clinic. This relatively simple BCI allows users to select on-screen options by imagining moving their foot. Because it is inserted into a blood vessel on the surface of the motor cortex, it doesn't require neurosurgery. It has proved safe, robust and effective in initial trials4, and Oxley says Synchron is discussing a pivotal trial with the US Food and Drug Administration that could lead to clinical approval.
Elon Musk's neurotech firm Neuralink in Fremont, California, has surgically implanted its more complex device in the motor cortices of at least 13 volunteers who are using it to play computer games, for example, and control robotic hands. Company representatives say that more than 10,000 people have joined waiting lists for its clinical trials.
At least five more BCI companies have tested their devices in humans for the first time over the past two years, making short-term recordings (on timescales ranging from minutes to weeks) in people undergoing neurosurgical procedures. Researchers in the field say the first approvals are likely to be for devices in the motor cortex that restore independence to people who have severe paralysis — including BCIs that enable speech through synthetic voice technology.
As for what's next, Farahany says that moving beyond the motor cortex is a widespread goal among BCI developers. "All of them hope to go back further in time in the brain," she says, "and to get to that subconscious precursor to thought."
(Score: 3, Funny) by Mojibake Tengu on Tuesday December 02, @05:39PM (11 children)
I welcome this technology. Wholeheartedly welcome.
After 5500 years, this may facilitate scientific detection of secret blood cultists and religious fanatics gripping humanity with their own tribal book-supported supremacy prejudice.
First step enabling to prune them out across the global population without racial or tribal hedging.
This is the new dawn we have been waiting for, for millenia.
Rust programming language offends both my Intelligence and my Spirit.
(Score: 3, Touché) by JoeMerchant on Tuesday December 02, @08:06PM (2 children)
> this may facilitate scientific detection of secret blood cultists and religious fanatics gripping humanity with their own tribal book-supported supremacy prejudice.
When they're secret, how do you know that it's not blood cultists and religious fanatics behind the happiest and most free societies on the planet?
🌻🌻🌻 [google.com]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 03, @03:56PM (1 child)
Are you referring to the Swiss?
https://youtu.be/gIZszF-QTZQ?t=839 [youtu.be]
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Thursday December 04, @01:02AM
I spent a little time in Switzerland - cool place, not sure I'd use "happy" as my first description of the people.
🌻🌻🌻 [google.com]
(Score: 1) by pTamok on Wednesday December 03, @09:47AM (4 children)
The "secret blood cultists and religious fanatics gripping humanity with their own tribal book-supported supremacy prejudice" will use it to identify non-members and make sure that the non-cultists cannot achieve power or challenge their own. The technology is two-way.
People hungry for power will tend to achieve powerful positions. That will not change. What the rest of us need to do is make sure that those in power are prevented from being too damaging.
Power has transferred successfully between the generations in North Korea (Cult of Person) and China (Cult of the Party). I'm curious to see if or how that will be disrupted. The USA appears to be attempting a transition from an imperfect democracy to a plutocracy, if you apply the concept of 'the purpose of the system is what it does'. In the same vein, the purpose of the EU appears to be government by trans-national lobbyists.
(Score: 2) by gnuman on Wednesday December 03, @12:23PM (3 children)
Seems to be better than war, no? It's amazing how EU evolved into a boogey-man. Keep it up, and you will get to the US-style disaster followed by Russian-style dictatorship. Institutions do not survive protracted attempts at undermining them. They can only delay it a few years in hope that the voters de-radicalize themselves in the meantime. If not, then there's no need for voting anymore.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday December 03, @01:23PM (2 children)
Depends on what happens in the long run. My take [soylentnews.org] on that:
Almost ten years later and no reason to revise my words.
Keep in mind that the chief source of undermining comes from the institutions themselves. Sure, you can undermine an institution by attacking its funding and other resources. But you can also undermine it by having the institution veer off what it was intended to do and lose its purpose. That incidentally is much easier to do.
And my take is that the EU needs a revised constitution to shift to greater democracy. Else we will have growing need to undermine it.
(Score: 2, Insightful) by whibla on Thursday December 04, @09:34AM (1 child)
"If you repeat a lie often enough people will believe it, and you will come to believe it yourself" - J Goebbels
The EU is not increasingly anti-democratic. It is exactly as (un)democratic as it has ever been. They do make some stupid-arse decisions, I'll grant, but they have also improved the lives of the vast majority of the population of Europe. Most of the problem, most of the (real, rather than manufactured) dissatisfaction stems from the fact that, as it grew in size, and in threading the line between the various interested parties, the number of people who were not 'perfectly' happy with the system grew. Quelle surprise! A compromise solution, by its very nature, means that (almost) everyone is partially dissatisfied with the outcome. What people do not generally recognise, however, is that the cumulative sum of dissatisfaction is lower than whatever the alternatives were, even if one of those alternatives meant that you or I personally would have been individually happier.
I wonder, though, if you ever asked yourself, honestly: why was there "long term and continued dissatisfaction with the EU in the UK?"
Years and years of stories in the British 'newspapers', specifically designed to enrage people - bendy bananas, no more pint glasses, can't call a sausage a sausage, and so on and so forth. The problem wasn't the EU, per se. The problem was the perception of the EU, as created by (one or two particular) 'journalists' - yes Boris, I mean you - and their editors, wanting 'stories' that sold more 'newspapers'.
Ah well. All good things come to an end.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Thursday December 04, @02:29PM
You can repeat that as often as you like.
Nobody is ever perfectly happy. That's not how happy works. Further, consider how weak that statement actually is. There are people who aren't perfectly happy in the EU. There were people who weren't perfectly happy under Stalin's USSR. Can we conclude some sort of equivalence from that?
I think the problem here is that you aren't asking yourself honestly. Those stories are somewhat exaggerated, but they reflect real grievances which as it turns out were large enough to drive Brexit.
(Score: 2) by gnuman on Wednesday December 03, @12:18PM (2 children)
Looking in the mirror?
Cultists and religious fanatics are not limited to established religions, or even any religion. Any belief lends itself to fanaticism and cult-like behaviour. For example, let's take Global Warming ... and before some cultist mods me down, despite Global Warming being a true fact at this point, you will still see fanaticism on both sides of this non-debate. It's 100% true that we need to decarbonize the economy, yet, there will be deniers that completely ignore facts and other fanatics that will glue themselves to roads because "all cars are bad" without understanding that the entire economy is CO2-spewing machine.
So no, replacing some religious texts with book burning crusades of the anti-religion cultists is not going to make things better.
There are only two things that make things better:
1. faith in each other -- you know, our society relies on this whether you like it or not, AND
2. being busy, as in taking on tasks to do. That is, not being "consumers" but "creators"
when you can do these two simple things, you will no longer be radicalizable and you will find contentment and happiness. This recipe has been the same for many thousands of years. And recipe for disaster is always via fear which leads to hate which leads to destruction.
(Score: 2) by Mojibake Tengu on Thursday December 04, @07:15AM (1 child)
No, not looking into mirror, sorry about that.
Looking at Palestine.
But that's just some current event.
Jared Kushner is member of Chabad Lubavitch Boston. His wife, Ivanka Trump converted as a member of Chabad Lubavitch New York. Vladimir Putin is a member of Chabad Lubavitch Moscow.
City of London Corporation is a Zionist central for more than a 1000 years now, chartered 1067. Their atrocities in India and Africa were not forgotten at least by my Indian friends.
It is impossible for me to not radicalize myself against anyone who systematically wants to colonize and enslave the whole planet, for thousands of years in a row. Intentionally destroying other cultures in the process...
I have no faith in enslavers and murderers, organized themselves into cults. I am not idiot.
You have just hardened me more radical.
Rust programming language offends both my Intelligence and my Spirit.
(Score: 2) by gnuman on Friday December 05, @10:15AM
So, if you replace any other group here, it's basically a statement of supremacy. It's kind of opposite of what I wrote too. You may just put Aryans and Nazis above and it fits well.
But you have to understand *why* they are doing this. And it's not "them", it's for any "other" finds and fights "enemies". They are doing this not because of kumbaya feelings or actually even feeling supremacy. This all happens when you allow *fear* to drive you. Someone that says "I'm better than all of you untermenschen" is not saying this because they are happy or actually powerful. They do this because they are scared shitless of the very people they belittle. You may have noticed, this is always the "we must defend us from the ...." and then you put here savages or whatever. This is a mindset of fear. This is how cults indoctrinate members.
No, that I'm definitely not doing. You can't even look into the mirror, after all.
You can fight fire with fire. You get more fire. Then the cycle repeats. Then when everyone is tired, they try to find solace and magically rediscover faith. Eventually complacency sets in. Fear wedges itself into mindsets and then it drives hate. Then back to fire with fire?
Personally, I always thought that you have to be radical against radicals. In some ways, that gives satisfaction. But, it does not prevent more radicals from radicalizing themselves. And today, that is even easier. For everyone, you can find a way to radicalize them. For everyone, you can find something they will be disturbed by. There is a reason why you do not want righteous people as members of police -- you want people to enforce the law, not take it into their own hands.
The *only* solution we have is faith in each other. This also means de-radicalizing the radicalized. Only then things will get better. More seriously, look around you. Look at your neighbourhood. Walk and look around. Talk to people. Then you realize that people that are living there are better off than almost anyone 100 years ago. Better than kings 200 years ago, that's for sure. We do not have 1 dead child for every 2 born -- that was *normal*. For millions of years. So, the question is, do you want to improve this or burn it all? Life is not as scary as you imagine. But without faith, it can be worse than you can image.