• @Allonzee
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    2 months ago

    The joke is that something Elon’s companies make actually works reliably.

    • TrenchcoatFullOfBats
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      642 months ago

      The joke is also that the burning car was a Tesla, and if Elon could, he’d push a patch to copy/paste his face onto any memories of firefighters found in a Neuralink customer’s brain

    • @thawed_caveman
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      112 months ago

      I was gonna say Tesla but he actually bought that company, and it doesn’t do as well anymore

  • @QueenHawlSera
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    592 months ago

    I’d be on board with Neuralink… if Musk wasn’t behind it.

    Think I"ll wait for an open source brain chip

    • @[email protected]
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      602 months ago

      It is a really interesting, very scary technology that requires a solid institutional foundation to provide trust. Musk degrades trust, he doesn’t build it.

      • Zement
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        252 months ago

        His maga fanboys would ram a rusty nail into their skull if he tells them it’s the hot new shit.

        • @ZoopZeZoop
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          42 months ago

          Sounds like he doesn’t need to give them neuralink, then.

    • @marcos
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      352 months ago

      I’m not sure I’d even trust a fully local open source one.

      The issues about trusting hardware and software development tools all lead to problems here.

      • JaggedRobotPubes
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        172 months ago

        Yeah if a bug or a hardware failure can make me see nightmare spiders everywhere or send a signal to my pain centers, that’s a permanent no.

  • @[email protected]
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    342 months ago

    Actual augments like this will never work if they phone home to do their job. There could be massive benefits to people with a huge variety of conditions and interests, but if it’s corpo ware and isn’t hyper protected by medical review, and long term support, it’s junk

    • @[email protected]
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      272 months ago

      Just play Deus Ex to see the potential ramifications. That and I know things go to the lowest bidder and I know what developers are like….

      • @samus12345
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        182 months ago

        One of many futuristic “dystopias” that actually ended up being far too optimistic compared to reality.

        “This plague…the rioting is intensifying to the point where we may not be able to contain it.”

        “Why contain it? Let it spill over the schools and churches, let the bodies pile up in the streets. In the end they’ll beg us to save them.”

        Reality: “In the end they’ll refuse to be vaccinated anyway.”

        • @Klear
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          162 months ago

          Saw an interview with Warren Spector where he said if he was making Deus Ex today, it would be completely different, since the game they made back then would look like a documentary.

          • @samus12345
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            2 months ago

            Cyberpunk dystopias are depressing because we have all of the bad stuff (corporations running everything) and none of the cool stuff (cybernetic augments).

  • @[email protected]
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    322 months ago

    How long till Apple photos inserts iPods into the background of your favourite childhood photos?

    “Subscribe to premium to (temporarily) remove branding from your family memories!”

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    Lol that’s funny! No one would actually do that to another person! We are completely safe because this degree of selfishness does not exist, that’s why I can laugh at it!

  • @[email protected]
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    182 months ago

    This is a plot point in one Stargate episode. It was a bit less melevolent but still scary

    • @TheKingBee
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      52 months ago

      I’ve been meaning to do a rewatch, what episode (a vague description I could look up myself is enough).

  • @[email protected]
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    182 months ago

    Okay so for anyone who’s played outer worlds I could see this sort of plot being central to outer worlds 2

    • @Viking_Hippie
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      2 months ago

      Probably not, since

      Tap for spoiler

      Starfield

      did the whole mind control implant thing already

      Any way to do a spoiler tag without the line break in Lemmy btw?

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        I mean so did

        Tap for spoiler

        Cyberpunk 2077 ::: that doesn’t mean obsidian can’t also write their own brain control sidequest or whatever.

        • @Viking_Hippie
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          2 months ago

          Idunno… I bet

          Tap for spoiler

          Bethesda

          is much more litigious than

          Tap for spoiler

          CD Projekt

  • @Shardikprime
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    2 months ago

    I think you people are vastly overestimating how much we actually know about the brain or severely underestimating how freaking complex it is.

    The “you” reading this right now, is a fucking stack of six A4 sized sheets, each one nanometers thick, and crumpled into something which, by all appearances, looks to an external observer as an oversized walnut seed, cooled and maintained by a network of 400 miles capillaries, and isolated from the world by the blood brain barrier, which can only be described as a fucking miracle.

    No. No one is going to be implanting any memories soon

    • @[email protected]
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      62 months ago

      AI is better at recognizing patterns than we are. The brain may be unfathomable to us, but technology already exists which could recognize the signals in your brain that represent memories and reproduce or alter them.

      Neuralink and similar devices are being used right now, today, to record the thoughts of animals. The first neuralink patient is alive and well, meaning it’s already being used on humans.

      Do you really think this technology won’t exist in our lifetime?

      • ✺roguetrick✺
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        82 months ago

        Do you really think this technology won’t exist in our lifetime?

        Yes, absolutely. What you’re describing is AGI. If an AI could untangle engrams from branched clusters of extremely plastic neurons, it could understand and improve it’s own thinking. It would actually be self aware before it could untangle the mess that our brains are. And I don’t see AGI happening with our current material and resource constraints before I die. Seeing brain regions being active and de-novo engram implantation is about as close as an LLM is to AGI.

        • @Shardikprime
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          42 months ago

          It is as you say, the scale doesn’t even exist at this point

          Even the recent fly brain mapping, enhanced with AI, had to take a destructive approach to map a half a milligram brain and these people are thinking matrix reloaded already

        • @[email protected]
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          02 months ago

          Being 70-80 years old sucks. My condolences. We’ll mess around with AGI when you’re gone and I’ll think about you

          • @Shardikprime
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            12 months ago

            Haha bro thinks the AGI will not be messing around with him LMAO 🤣

        • @[email protected]
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          -22 months ago

          Respectfully, this sounds like opinion and doubt rather than a credibly timeline. Other than rattling off industry terms the only support you’ve given your argument is “I don’t see AGI happening”. You’ve collected an impressive shopping basket of buzz words but done little to dissuade me or the engineers developing this technology that it won’t be ready within a lifetime. Stay tuned.

          Oh, and “its own thinking” not “it’s own thinking”. His, hers, its.

          • ✺roguetrick✺
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            42 months ago

            Your extrapolation has about as much support. I don’t really know what bothers you about the vocabulary I used but I can say I don’t play much attention to punctuation marks when inputting text with a swipe keyboard on my phone.

            • @[email protected]
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              -22 months ago

              “pay much attention” not “play”. I’d be more careful with that keyboard if I were you. Wouldn’t want to lose any credibility.

              • ✺roguetrick✺
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                42 months ago

                I thought I made it clear enough I didn’t give a shit.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -22 months ago

                  But you expect us to care about your opinion? Be correct and be nice or you won’t get to finish the discussion. It’s like a recipe, you have to do the work to get the product.

    • @[email protected]
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      Maybe memories are actually really simple. Like the words on a screen. An arrangement of symbols, then a boatload of meaning and interpretation and rationalization. So all you need to do to make memories is to insert a few words. The brain’s “memory interpreter” does the rest of the work.

      For example, we insert the words “brother appears”. Then, for the “new memory”, we reference your memories of your brother. His appearance and the sound of his voice. Then we contrive a narrative explaining why “brother” is at this place and time. Etc. Voila! You now have a memory of your brother standing there saying some stuff.

      So to make a memory, it wouldn’t require a grand delicate manipulation of brainstuff. Just a simple thing.

      • @Shardikprime
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        12 months ago

        Memory and simple are words that you can only read when saying “memory IS NOT simple”

        For fucks sake, our body stores memories for preferences in our literal guts

        Memory is a lot of things except simple

  • TronNerd82
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    72 months ago

    Don’t worry, soon enough someone will figure out how to install Gentoo on it, and then you can have a headache every time you compile packages.

  • ME5SENGER_24
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    42 months ago

    Companies are constantly being called out for selling user data, imagine the shit that will come out if this shit goes mainstream. Then multiple that but all the stories about a Tesla going rogue and you pretty much end up with the worst possible idea ever.

  • Troy
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    -332 months ago

    The problem with the comic’s premise is that Neuralink doesn’t do memories at all. It’s more like a replacement for a keyboard and mouse.

    But sure, I guess: never pass up a cheap shot on Elon ;)

    • @vsopongeOP
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      2 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • Rhaedas
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        232 months ago

        (just like Black Mirror)

        Technology’s red flag.

        • @[email protected]
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          112 months ago

          What, are you saying we shouldn’t build the Torment Nexus as envisioned in sci-fi classic ‘Don’t Create the Torment Nexus’?

      • Troy
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        -62 months ago

        I’m no neuroscientist (just a regular scientist who happens to know a little about neurology). But those quotes are entirely speculation. Dealing first with the premise of the comic:

        (1) The comic has the chip loading arbitrary memories into a person’s brain. In order to do that, we would have to have a total map of the person’s brain and then craft a memory that fits into it. The processing power and the number of interconnections to have a total map are entirely in the realm of science fiction for the foreseeable future. Neuralink is advertising 1024 electrodes. To pull this off you would need trillions of electrodes.

        (2) Furthermore, you’d need to have a computer craft the precise stimulus response mapped to an individuals unique neural network – that would mean that a computer will have had to completely decode their entire brain and memories first, or at a minimum be able to simulate their entire brain. And then run a bunch of forward models trying to fit the new data into the existing data in a seamless way. Yes, theoretically possible given infinite computing power, but not actually practical.

        (3) The first two require major leaps in technology beyond neuralink itself. Probably you’re looking at borg style nano-machines in order to pull off this level of neural integration and the processing power to map, understand, and model an entire brain (NVIDIA isn’t going to cut it, even projecting Moore’s law decades down the road).

        (4) In conclusion, Elon will never be able to pull this off the comic before he dies.

        Now, if you assume Elon is extrapolating into the far future.

        (5) saving and replaying memories might be easier, because you don’t have to map and entire brain (just a section), and you don’t have to model the brain to create the memory – just restimulate the same neurons. This is probable, with or without Neuralink, as a technological advancement in probably decades.

        (6) Likewise, copying an existing brain into a new or simulated brain is easier than injecting a memory into an existing brain. You’d still need to have another “blank brain” as a host (whatever form that entails), and you’d need enough data from your real brain to make the copy (well, that brings us back to items 2&3). This is probable, with or without Neuralink, as a technological advancement in probably centuries.

        Neither 5 nor 6 help with the premise of the comic. But I suppose if we have the tech to do (6) in a few centuries, we could probably have the computing power to model new memories on an individual basis too.

        Elon will be dead by then.

        • @hangonasecond
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          112 months ago

          1, the comic is a joke, and 2, the author obviously doesn’t believe the technology will exist imminently since the premise is what Elon has promised it will do, not the actual science and what is currently possible.

          Stop giving the benefit of the doubt to somebody who has repeatedly and demonstrably lied about the capabilities of things they have a financial interest in. He has more money than God, in part in thanks to his deceit, he really doesn’t need your help.

        • @Sanctus
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          42 months ago

          Awh man, I can’t believe this has been removed from the internet forever. 😞