Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

The potential pitfalls of technologies like Elon Musk’s Neuralink

5 views
Skip to first unread message

FBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer

unread,
Jan 30, 2022, 1:57:43 AM1/30/22
to



Elon Musk doesn't know that CIA NSA MI6 MI5 CSIS ASIS ASIO Psychopaths
COMPLETELY REVERSE ENGINEERED human brain and DEVELOPED Mind Control
Technologies by the 1970s.

It is a COMPLETE JOKE that Neuralink developed a COIN SIZED CHIP.

CIA developed MIND CONTROL NANOBOTS 50 years ago and have been SECRETLY
CHIPPING cocksucking confused gender white filth for the last 50 yrs.

CIA n NSA also SHARED this technology with their COUNTERPARTS in MI6 MI5
ASIS ASIO CSIS and other intelligence agencies around the world and
FORMED a SECRET SOCIETY Illuminati Deep State and SECRETLY CHIPPING
Global Public by SPRAYING Mind Control Nanobots in the AIR we breathe.
We INHALE those Nanobots and they travel through our noses into our
BRAINS and attach themselves to SYNAPSES and NEURONS and STAY THERE FOREVER.

Later CIA n NSA developed even more ADVANCED MIND CONTROL TECHNOLOGY by
LINKING "Individual UNIQUE DNA Resonance Frequency" to NSA Quantum
Computer HIVE AI and REMOTELY OPERATING millions of humans like PUPPETS.

Elon Musk is a fucking OVER RATED JOKER.


A couple of University Scientists at University of Buffalo DEVELOPED
Mind Control Technology and REMOTELY OPERATED animals with MIND CONTROL
NANOBOTS back in 2010, that is 12 fucking years back with JUST a couple
of MILLION DOLLARS of RESEARCH BUDGET.

With Magnetic Nanoparticles, Scientists Remotely Control Neurons and
Animal Behavior
http://www.buffalo.edu/news/releases/2010/07/11518.html





================================================================================


https://www.sydney.edu.au/law/news-and-events/news/2020/09/08/potential-pitfalls-of-technologies-like-elon-musks-neuralink.html

Legal scholar warns of emerging issues for ethics and criminal law

The potential pitfalls of technologies like Elon Musk’s Neuralink
Legal scholar warns of emerging issues for ethics and criminal law

Legal researchers consider the complex legal and ethical consequences of
neurotechnologies, with a focus on Elon Musk's new device.

8 September 2020

Elon Musk announced that one of his companies, Neuralink, had had
implanted an interface (a kind of computer chip) about the size of coin
into the skull of a pig named Gertrude. Neuralink researchers wirelessly
linked the brain to an external computer, to establish a connection
between the two.

Whilst the device is not yet approved for implantation into a human
brain, the company also announced that it had obtained US Food and Drug
Administration approval to expedite the regulatory process toward this goal.


This brain-computer interfacing technology might be thought of as
another step on the road to a merger between humans and artificial
intelligence. It could enable a human to control a cursor, wheelchair or
drone by mental act rather than a more conventional bodily action, like
pressing a button or controlling a mouse by hand.

But there are more complex potential consequences to consider.

" For example, if a person were to commit a crime by way of
brain-computer interface, what would the ‘criminal act’ be? "
Authors, Dr Allan McCay, Sydney Law School and Dr Nicole Vincent, UTS

If, at some point in the future, a person controls a drone by thought to
kill someone, a court may have to respond to an unorthodox crime.

Aside from Neuralink, other so-called ‘neurotechnologies’ are available
from or under development by other companies. These include brain
stimulations aimed at altering psychological states, which also raises
hypothetical questions about criminal responsibility.

Authors, Dr Allan McCay, Sydney Law School and Dr Nicole Vincent, UTS

If, at some point in the future, a person controls a drone by thought to
kill someone, a court may have to respond to an unorthodox crime.

Aside from Neuralink, other so-called ‘neurotechnologies’ are available
from or under development by other companies. These include brain
stimulations aimed at altering psychological states, which also raises
hypothetical questions about criminal responsibility.



0 new messages