| > I said an interface, not a full blown computer. does it matter? the moment my brain becomes a computer's peripheral (input and output alike), said computer can read from my brain and infer things I don't want it to infer. > The idea would be to have a standard protocol so you can control the computer of your choice good luck doing that without a regulatory push that's tenfold stronger than DMA. we are lucky to not have vendor-locked keyboards and mice. > I think it is interesting in a way that it could allow deaf, mute and blind people to communicate more easily ...with the same research that has a HUGE potential for law enforcement/employer/adtech corp/Palantir/whoever to forcefully crack my brain open for them? no thanks I'd rather put `contentDescription` and `alt` properties of UI components as well as test the deaf/mute/blind experience rigorously than face BCI > But I don't see how we can avoid this kind of technology to take over at some point. so let's delay it for as long as we physically can! |