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by andybak 1063 days ago
I think you've hit upon some interesting examples. Maybe the way to look at this is cost vs "benefit" (in the broadest sense of the word).

When research has an obvious and immediate negative outcome that's a cost. The difficulty/expense of the research is also a cost.

The "benefit" would be the incentive to know the outcome. This may be profit, military advantage, academic kudos etc.

Maybe the problem with the type of research being discussed here is that there isn't neccesarily any agreement that the outcome is negative. For many people, I suspect this will remove a lot of the weight on the "cost" side of things.

I'm not making a specific point here - I'm actually trying to work this out in my head as I write.

1 comments

> I think you've hit upon some interesting examples. Maybe the way to look at this is cost vs "benefit" (in the broadest sense of the word).

This is obviously a better framework to be in.

"If I don't do it someone else will" is really fraught and that's why people reject it.

So one would really need to ask is there a net benefit to having a "mind reading" system out in the world. In fact I find it hard to think of positive use cases that aren't just dwarfed by the possibility of Orwellian/panopticon type hellscapes.

> In fact I find it hard to think of positive use cases

Firstly - forcing people to think of positive use-cases up front is a terrible way to think about science. Most discoveries would have failed this test.

Secondly - can you really not? Off the top-of my head:

a) Research tools for psychology and other disciplines

b) Assistive devices for the severely disabled

c) An entirely new form of human-computer interface with many possible areas of application

As I mentioned do any of those outweigh the possibility that some 3 letter agency might start mass scanning US Citizens for what amounts to thought crime? The very fundamental idea of privacy would cease to exist.
That's a very big leap. If we're at the stage where a three letter agency can put you in an fMRI machine, then we're probably also at the stage where they can beat you with a rubber hose until you confess.

My point is that there's already a wide variety of things a future draconian state can do. This doesn't seem to move the dial very much.