GladiusB,
@GladiusB@lemmy.world avatar

He’s on the 2 gig plan

Fades,

Literally WHO did not see this coming??

Did the fucking chimps begging for death not tip these people off???

FiniteBanjo,

Generally the World Health Organization doesn’t make a statement on procedures until results are shown. /s

pyre,

this dude can’t make a car pedal right what did you expect

sebinspace,

He doesn’t technically make anything, tbf. He just takes credit for all of it.

pyre,

the stupidest things are always made on his demand

dukethorion,
@dukethorion@lemmy.world avatar

Was he throttled due to not upgrading to the latest model?

TheLowestStone,
@TheLowestStone@lemmy.world avatar

No, he forgot to put himself in car wash mode before getting wet.

dukethorion,
@dukethorion@lemmy.world avatar

😂

Lets_Eat_Grandma,

About a month after surgery the implant started to perform poorly. They tweaked some software settings and now it’s running better than it did before the drop-off for a longer period, based on the actual blog post the story is talking about neuralink.com/…/prime-study-progress-update-user-….

This is obviously prototype technology with insane risk. The guy only signed up because he’s paraplegic. It’s not in any way remotely ready for normal humans and probably won’t ever be in our lifetimes. IMO this is like self driving technology, it’s easy to promise the world but hard to actually accomplish what they say.

Theharpyeagle,

I really feel conflicted about this. I hate Musk as much as anyone and think this experiment is a little irresponsible, but if I were going through what that guy is dealing with, I’d probably want to give it a try.

Lets_Eat_Grandma,

I have nothing but admiration for the guy willing to be the human experiment. He’s like an astronaut paving the way for a potential future for mankind.

Even if someone else finds the right way of doing it, this is driving us towards having practical man-machine interfaces. It’s really cool.

Also completely terrifying to think about being the experiment myself.

piecat,

It’s definitely morally complicated. Like paying life changing money for medical testing or organ harvesting.

On one hand, yeah he’s making a sacrifice for human advancement. On the other hand…

Fades,

Ya think so??

I’m already a paraplegic, may as well just fuck my brain too

Not sure the logic checks out

wired.com/…/elon-musk-pcrm-neuralink-monkey-death…

machinin,

That is what makes this even more egregious. Musk doesn’t care about this guy in the slightest, except for the publicity that might help Musk raise more investor money. So Musk takes advantage of this desperation without any concern for long-term consequences. We know people left the company because of their ethical concerns. Those that remain probably just don’t care or aren’t on a position to do anything about the lack of ethics.

Pilferjinx,

That’s definitely one legitimate perspective. Another would be from the guy who can potentially gain some of his automony and dignity back regardless of the asshole who is itching to profit from it.

machinin, (edited )

I guess it is an old argument. How willing are we, as a society, to protect people from being taken advantage of by cons. Musk had been extremely resilient for a con man. Probably because he mainly goes after relatively poor people.

Musk’s companies aren’t the only ones making breakthroughs in their respective fields. The only difference between Musk companies and others is that Musk just didn’t care about safety, so his companies cut corners to make people think they are ahead. Other companies who are more responsible aren’t willing to cut those corners for ethical reasons.

JasSmith,

It’s not like the technology is a con. Brain implants have been iterated upon for decades. This is just the latest incarnation - after extensive animal testing. I don’t think we have a right to tell a quadriplegic they may not meaningfully improve their lives because we feel the risk is too high. They’re locked in a living prison.

Rekorse,

This is only logical if Neuralink is the only company doing this, but they are not.

Even the cofounder of Neuralink split off to make his own version of the company that puts safety first, and is working on a noninvasive (meaning doesn’t damage the brain by design) version of the same technology.

technocrit,

Elon with some next level scumbaggery exploiting the disabled.

EatATaco,

The guy volunteered for it, knowing the risk, and calls it a luxury that he uses all the time and has helped him “reconnect with the world.”

Don’t let your justified hatred of musk blind you to reality.

SkyezOpen,

Also not much different from clinical trials. “All known treatment failed and you’re gonna die? How about testing some crazy shit?”

warmaster,

“Sorry guys, Elon is experiencing technical difficulties, please remain patient while we bugfix his Neuralink and then update it to Evil Overlord OS v0.2 alpha to his Neuralink”

possiblylinux127,

This is coming from a company by the same guy who approved the cybertruck.

They just want to get a product out the door no matter the cost.

Fades,

they killed a bunch of monkeys as part of that goal to get it out the door: wired.com/…/elon-musk-pcrm-neuralink-monkey-death…

I guess disabled humans aren’t shit either to elon

kandoh,

Didn’t it die and they had to pull it out of RFK’s skull?

Coreidan,

Reaaaaaaaaaally??? Never saw this coming /s

EatATaco,

You truly are a genius to realize that developing new technologies often encounter problems and it doesn’t always go smoothly.

Fades,

wired.com/…/elon-musk-pcrm-neuralink-monkey-death…

it’s far more than just not going smoothly

EatATaco, (edited )

Please expand.

(edit: lol downvotes but no explanation. That’s because if they actually read the article, the problem they are talking about is really not all that big of a deal)

Coreidan,

You truly are a genius

DUUUUUH tell me something I don’t already know

Skrewzem,
Skrewzem avatar

Imagine when we hear that neuralink used substandard components and these starts rusting inside people's skulls

Bookmeat,

Did the implant eat part of the subject’s brain and then die?

possiblylinux127,

He just lost his free will, nothing to important.

1000002367

KISSmyOSFeddit,

I find the wording weird: The neuralink’s threads have retracted from the brain.
The threads can’t move or disconnect on their own. Neither can brain cells. All that can be measured is a loss of connection.

The far more reasonable explanation is that the brain cells at the connection point have died.

nyan,

I seem to recall that scarring around the electrodes, which eventually causes them to stop functioning, is a known failure mode of older experiments along similar lines. It’s one of the reasons I didn’t hold out much hope for this iteration.

I just hope the patient doesn’t take any long-term damage from the implant.

mjhelto,

If the moneys are anything to go on, that dude’s in for an extremely painful death.

MartianSands,

In principle they could have pulled out slightly, if there’s jostling and tiny movements in skull then you’d expect them to work loose over time if they’re not securely anchored

just_another_person,

The patient was a paraplegic. I’m not sure how much they’d be capable of moving enough to dislodge the in-skull writing.

Zron,

Paraplegics still need to move or be moved.

If they don’t rotate into different laying or sitting positions, they’ll develop bed sores they can’t even feel, which can be extremely dangerous. They also still need to move their limbs to avoid blood clots.

All this shows is that Neurolink isn’t ready for one reason or another. Either the wires are so fragile they become dislodged or broken by gentle movements during physiotherapy, or the surgery damaged the brain. Either way this is a major issue with the technology. No way are they going to be putting robot limbs on people if the chip that can control them is this unreliable.

TheLowestStone,
@TheLowestStone@lemmy.world avatar

No way are they going to be putting robot limbs on people if the chip that can control them is this unreliable.

Let me just go ahead and remind you that the cyber truck exists.

NotMyOldRedditName, (edited )

In one of the interview with Nolan he says he has full body spasms when he sits in the chair and those spasms take him out of position from being able to use the mouth stick controller. With neuralink he doesn’t need intervention by someone else post spasms to continue.

Definitely enough to be jostling the head, but he didn’t get into explicit detail of how serious they are movement wise.

Edit: side note, makes me wonder if they’re a build up of spinal signals and the cord briefly connects and suddenly a pile of commands go through and he spasms.

KillingTimeItself,

i would assume the brain itself has retracted from neuralink.

I.e. The brain doesnt want fuck shit to do with it.

HelloHotel,
@HelloHotel@lemmy.world avatar

If im not 100% off basis here, “Electric meat is still meat, and we just stabbed it with little tiny forks”

recursive_recursion,
@recursive_recursion@programming.dev avatar

oh huh

just had a moment where I realized that this is a real prelude to SOMA and maybe .hack//SIGN

  • although we’re currently seeing the pros and cons for proprietary hardware+software

ooh this is a real bizarre feeling I’m currently having

BirdEnjoyer,

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • devfuuu, (edited )

    Just let the AI create its own poetry about that. Ain’t they selling us the idea that it can do anything and humans are useless and deprecated now?

    Zoomboingding,
    @Zoomboingding@lemmy.world avatar

    Hey what can I say we were overdue
    It’ll be over soon, just wait

    Kolanaki,
    @Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

    “We can’t control him and he’s currently on a rampage. We urge all citizens to stay indoors with the doors and windows locked and your curtains or blinds drawn.”

    spearz,

    “…you now have five seconds to comply….”

    Sabata11792,
    Sabata11792 avatar

    From what I seen, I think I can win a fight against the guy by tipping him over.

    possiblylinux127,
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