I wouldn’t necessarily boast about being the guy who started Internet Explorer, myself, but this is a guy who knows…

I wouldn’t necessarily boast about being the guy who started Internet Explorer, myself, but this is a guy who knows tech, and his company is taking a different approach to neural interfaces: no implants, and the sensors are not on people’s heads but on their arms. I’ll watch it with interest, and a bit of skepticism.

NB: article needs a lot more punctuation.

Originally shared by Judah Richardson

From Elon’s Neuralink to Bryan Johnson’s Kernel, a new wave of businesses are specifically focusing on ways to access, read and write from the brain.

The holy grail lies in how to do that without invasive implants, and how to do it for a mass market.

https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/01/thomas-reardon-and-ctrl-labs-are-building-an-api-for-the-brain/

2 thoughts on “I wouldn’t necessarily boast about being the guy who started Internet Explorer, myself, but this is a guy who knows…

  1. After the whole Facebook interference debacle I’m not sure we can trust profit-motivated entities with access to our brains. And yes, I’m a capitalist. Just seems like a recipe for disaster.

  2. After the whole Facebook interference debacle I’m not sure we can trust profit-motivated entities with access to our brains. And yes, I’m a capitalist. Just seems like a recipe for disaster.

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