Scientists fuse brains with AI implants to 'give people superhuman intelligence'
Brain-boosting electrodes will soon become “like plastic surgery" as all we race to get cybernetic enhancements
KELLY WEINERSMITH DISCUSSES HER BOOK ON EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES
Humans will be turned into cyborgs — with scientists sticking AI implants deep into their brains.
It's even theorised that the electric implants can be manipulated to make users max out their brain power — similarly to how amphetamines like Adderall are abused today.
Science power couple Kelly and Zach Weinersmith explored the exciting advancements in their brand new book “Soonish - Ten Emerging Technologies That’ll Improve And/Or Ruin Everything”.
The pair reckon that brain-boosting electrodes will soon become “like plastic surgery” — with people spending shedloads in order to become smarter and stay ahead of the pack.
Humans might even share thoughts in a giant AI hive mind
“As brain-computer interface technology becomes more reliable, it may have implications in many industries,” they wrote.
“An ideal brain-computer interface can make you smarter, better at remembering things, more focused, and perhaps even more creative.
“You can’t think about the possibilities without picturing some sort of cyborg diaspora and yet given the opportunity to suddenly have a better memory, we’d probably all take it.”
The race for cybernetic enhancement will be 'like how plastic surgery has taken off'
Even weirder is the possibility of a human hive mind — we will be able to share each other’s thoughts like an army of ants working in unison.
Lab rats had their brains linked via a brain-computer interface in one set of experiments.
“The results do appear to be a sort of brain-to-brain connection,” the Weinersmiths said.
“We don’t know whether these lab rats were literally sharing thoughts, but their connected brains seem to get together and work together more efficiently.
“At some point in the future, it may become possible to literally combine minds with other people, either for recreational or business purposes."
“To us, this sounds like a nightmare version of doing a group project, but each to her own.”
Mind-reading would have considerable downsides though — like thinking “I want to divorce my wife” when you are sat on the sofa, next to your wife.
The devices could also be hacked, either for murder or a dark, futuristic version of domestic abuse.
“In the case of brain implants, hacking could mean a lot of things.
“For serious implants, a hacker might be able to traumatise or kill an individual.
“More subtly, by accessing a deep brain stimulator a hacker might be able to control your mood or even aspects of your personality.”
The Weinersmiths think the brain-computer interface is the most “unpredictable” radical emerging technology of all.
“If your brain is connected to a computer and the two can modify each other, you are not a human being as we have always known ourselves.
“It would be an end and a beginning.”
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