finding immortality it's been an obsession of mankind since the
start of history a technology that marks the beginnings of a new kind of man the
cyborg the robot man
these are little microchips that were that we've designed that you can
actually put in a body forget wearable technology Swedish
office worker Lynne kovash Kerr is having it implanted under her skin and
you can actually do remote controlled drug delivery actually even with the
cellphone or a blackberry or something like that so the idea is that you have
little wells you can even put antennas on these little gems and you have and
you can communicate with the Chapman outside the body alright this next story
may sound like something out of well a Hollywood thriller a Saudi inventor has
created a killer microchip it's designed to track terrorists and criminals and
Wow you can think of somebody not only does
it include a GPS device it also has a lethal dose of cyanide which can be
activated at any time he is a real-life Cyberman the mind control works through
a device implanted directly into the motor cortex but so quietly these two
things along with the progress of computing really started to converge in
a way that most people didn't expect get my point
Digital is reshaping the world and this is going very very fast
today wherever we go were inevitably surrounded by fellow citizens staring
into their phones as we usually are to
in the first 10 years of the 21st century the world was experiencing an
explosive growth of the Internet age now day two of Facebook's f8 conference in
is underway in San Jose California now in day two the social media behemoth
revealed it's working on building a brain-computer interface that will let
you type with just your mind but if anybody can do three huge visionary
future companies I suppose it's Elon Musk look he is great at making things
that people don't think could ever happen happen and it sort of ties in
with some of the things we heard out of f8 this weekend REE right right
questions of whether you can type with your mind Facebook is talking about its
own moon shots and this is a direct brain interface to so obviously lots of
folks out there are thinking about it Facebook's example so as the AI
scientists are building the the tools the machine learning tools the world is
starting to to to be filled with data well scientists in China say they have
built the world's first machine that can compute many times faster than the
current breed of supercomputers machines that take those ones and zeros to a
level of computing power that has never existed
we heard the term game-changer how significant is this quantum computer
development it pours a universal quantum computer very important milestone is
that we're starting to emerge out of the research era to commercialization in
real people terms how would this impact your life in my daily life so that it
does not simply take data and go through it and sort it it looks at the entirety
of the data and sorts it instantaneously well there's a saying of finding a
needle in the haystack that is a very difficult thing to do let's try to
simplify this a little bit imagine this room is a library and we just take one
book and on just one page we write an X but with quantum computing now you can
actually isolate down to a specific sand particle out of all the sand in the
world that goes from just a few seconds to being its attains faster that I could
snap my fingers but what if it was looking for that one X on that one page
and it had to sort through every single book in the world there are billions of
them and it would take a computer of today centuries probably would be
impossible but a quantum computer that's where things change completely because
it goes through all of the books and all of the pages all at the same time and
finds that X in seconds as well as powering the future generation
artificial intelligence that in in the future can be fully autonomous and canal
systems or systems especially in the context of smart cities this has a huge
ability to enable the internet of things become functional on a daily basis so
brand new privacy problems thanks to technology go figure
something that you actually use every day could again be spying on your every
move all this has now responded to this
lawsuit yet but the connect licensing agreement does say that it may collect
your data so that information is in there but it does not specifically
mention the collection of the audio file so the devil really is in the details
here and that's why we find even like people like Google are using it to sort
your information the apps on your phone may be eavesdropping on you a new
article in Wired magazine claims that apps have increasingly incorporated
ultrasonic tones to track consumers Matt and I then logged into the email of a
friend who will keep anonymous and all his whereabout so far in 2017 popped
right up in scary detail not only was that able to guess a few things about
this friend he guessed right I mean the interesting thing here is that when you
are listening to music why do you listen to music through headphones you think
it's a private experience well is it really that private now we're not so
sure anymore in fact this is already here this is already happening Internet
giant's are all infusing artificial intelligence in all their products and
services
snapchat uses is to improve advertisement targeting Apple and its
GPS functions all of our products and services are now being enhanced by AI
and it already seems normal to us it already seems normal
because our brain perfectly adapts your current environment and in fact it
adapts so well that it makes us blind in terms of how fast this is going and to
power this with a breakthrough innovation engine modeled after DARPA
products that recognize we are both mind and body that our world is both digital
and physical you know that Google go even further they want to make us live
forever they consider death as a disease and they want to make us live forever
this is just the beginning what if you could type directly from your brain it
sounds impossible but it's closer than you may realize
and it's just the kind of fluid human-computer interface needed for a
our everyday there is news coverage on the latest advances in AI
understanding semantics means that one day you may be able to choose to share
your thoughts independent of language
how would you characterize the level of concern the public should have with
respect to their privacy DEFCON five that I think that that we have very
little privacy left and I think that the sooner the people accept the fact that
basically there's no privacy going forward the safer and the society will
become the sooner you realize that whatever you're writing an email can be
read by motivated others the sooner that we all realize that being an atheist or
being liberal conservative is something that basically people will know about
well they could probably very easily infer it now and definitely will just
get easier in the future do you see an explosion of the use of GPS devices and
and obviously a lot of people are concerned about an intrusion of privacy
absolutely sure I mean I think that that there is a trade-off there and obviously
this this you know the the inventor who file for this patent has gone across the
line in terms of privacy but the you know the use of GPS in the future will
allow you to you know you'll never lose your wallet again you'll never lose your
keys again it's that kind of stuff where you're gonna you know you'll be able to
beat any object you own you know and and and find it in the house and so you know
there's the there's the vicious expression and then there's the really
really helpful expression I think we'll see in the future you know I to
electrodes in this sensory cortex of the rat send stimuli to the zones connected
to its whiskers when the rat follows the signal sent to
its left side and turns in that direction it is rewarded with a
discharge into its pleasure zone this discharge produces a flow of dopamine
providing instant pleasure this zone is also called the brain's reward center we
possess a reward center - just like the rat in the process of creating a cyborg
this is square one if we send a stimulus to the zone related to the hand we
create a sensation in that area in the same way via the motor cortex we can
provoke an involuntary movement in Boston the first machine brain interface
trials have already been conducted on paraplegic patients thanks to an
electrode chip called the brain gate they can operate a computer remotely by
thought so it's no coincidence that these researches are partly funded by
DARPA the USS Defense Research agency
neuroscience will bring us the soldier of the future
this is a new deal gentlemen
enemy center gravity is downtown a
remote-controlled soldier a soldier when the midst of the battle can be sent
crucial data and information downloaded into his brain
a soldier who can control his fears
you
dude look at me people all those two people you said we pull up in the white
car I shot that dude in the white car ready oh yes you're gonna get it yes no
T little boys yes yes yes yeah we possess a reward center too just
like their rat if we send a stimulus to the zone related to the hand we create a
sensation in that area in the same way via the motor cortex we can provoke an
involuntary movement
we are going to reach a level of control the more we learn about the brain the
more researchers discover how little our consciousness and will control our
choices and behaviors our way of living might be completely transformed do you
want to know
this drug was in fact with the AIDS virus sent parents a letter warning them
to make sure their children are vaccinated immunization for all children
admits the group takes money from the vaccine industry to have Radio Frequency
Identification ships place inside their hands
you
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