Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AI Cellphones Software Hardware Technology

Elon Musk Wants To Put An AI Hardware Chip In Your Skull (itmunch.com) 362

"iTMunch reports that Elon Musk apparently believes that the human race can only be "saved" by implanting chips into our skulls that make us half human, half artificial intelligence," writes Slashdot reader dryriver. From the report: Elon Musk's main goal, he explains, is to wire a chip into your skull. This chip would give you the digital intelligence needed to progress beyond the limits of our biological intelligence. This would mean a full incorporation of artificial intelligence into our bodies and minds. He argues that without taking this drastic measure, humanity is doomed. There are a lot of ethical questions raised on the topic of what humanity according to Elon Musk exactly is, but he seems undeterred. "My faith in humanity has been a little shaken this year," Musk continues, "but I'm still pro-humanity."

The seamless conjunction of humans and computers gives us humans a shot at becoming completely "symbiotic" with artificial intelligence, according to Elon Musk. He argues that humans as a species are all already practically attached to our phones. In a way, this makes us almost cyborg-like. The only difference is that we haven't managed to expand our intelligence to that level. This means that we are not as smart as we could be. The data link that currently exists between the information that we get from our phones or computers is not as fast as it could be. "It will enable anyone who wants to have superhuman cognition," Musk said. "Anyone who wants."
As for how much smarter humans will become with these AI chips, Musk writes: "How much smarter are you with a phone or computer or without? You're vastly smarter, actually," Musk said. "You can answer any question pretty much instantly. You can remember flawlessly. Your phone can remember videos (and) pictures perfectly. Your phone is already an extension of you. You're already a cyborg. Most people don't realize you're already a cyborg. It's just that the data rate [...] it's slow, very slow. It's like a tiny straw of information flow between your biological self and your digital self. We need to make that tiny straw like a giant river, a huge, high-bandwidth interface."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Elon Musk Wants To Put An AI Hardware Chip In Your Skull

Comments Filter:
  • Lots of trust (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NettiWelho ( 1147351 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @05:07AM (#57976160)
    Are you sure the chip isn't capable of turning your power switch to off position?
    • Re:Lots of trust (Score:5, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @05:11AM (#57976178) Homepage Journal

      Yep, trust is the issue. I'd love to have a built in clock/calendar and calculator, but I'm not sure I'd trust anyone to make one for me.

      Then again implants are going to become more and more common, e.g. pacemakers and other kinds of regulators to deal with specific conditions. Given the choice I'd probably accept one, rather than live (or die) without. I'd prefer if they could disable the wifi function though.

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      Not "off". Just "jump off this bridge".
  • TO DO list (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 17, 2019 @05:10AM (#57976174)

    He seems to have this list of things he thought were important when he was 17 and is simply going down that list.

    Unfortunately eternal September happened. The chip in your brain better have some good filtering capability and come fully loaded with ad block, no script and blacklist any site where you might be influenced by anyone in the negative or median IQ range. So essentially all of it.

  • Reminds me of this episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • Maybe focus on actually making an AI first before worrying about chips in your head, also, no thanks. This is like him creating spacex but only just after the wright brother made their flight.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @06:34AM (#57976362) Homepage Journal

      Actually a little before the Wright Brother's famous flight, in the same year, Konstantin Tsiolkovsky published The Exploration of Cosmic Space by Means of Reaction Devices. It was the first serious proposal to explore space, offering a somewhat practical method of doing so.

      He went on to design things like multi-stage boosters and life support systems. It's incredible to think that there were people seriously thinking about exploring space when powered flight wasn't even possible yet.

    • Maybe focus on actually making an AI first before worrying about chips in your head, also, no thanks. This is like him creating spacex but only just after the wright brother made their flight.

      Honestly would prefer a dumb chip in my head that can instantly supply me with facts and do computations instantly that takes my bio-brain too long to do (and often makes mistakes with). Expert AI like that I'm all for, and exists today. I'm not looking to change my CPU, just add a peripheral.

      It's when you throw in t

  • by Computershack ( 1143409 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @05:41AM (#57976258)
    Being able to get an answer from Google or a calculator doesn't mean you're smarter Elon, in fact it often means the opposite. Its no good being given an answer if you don't know what to do with that information.
    • by Katatsumuri ( 1137173 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @06:13AM (#57976330)
      You don't have to be so condescending. It may not make you an omniscient space opera superintelligence, but just being able to learn a language quickly, or remember a unique password for every website is a useful upgrade. Use your imagination, there are thousands of useful applications for a neural interface that can save you the time and unnecessary mental effort, allowing you to think more about "what to do with that information", effectively making you "smarter" by many practical definitions.
      • by RobinH ( 124750 )
        If I believed I could have total control of that chip, then sure, maybe. However, if some other entity can push advertising into my head, or interrupt me while I'm doing work, or (worst case) track my internal state of mind... no thanks.
      • > just being able to learn a language quickly Please, tell me how. I've been living and working in my second language for a decade and I'm still learning... If you mean being able to decipher a street sign, or order breakfast, fine, but that isn't language learning...
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        You can get phone apps that let you measure things just by pointing the camera at them. Accuracy isn't as good as a ruler but it's good enough for a lot of purposes. Imagine being able to just look at something and have it's dimensions and a 3D model stored...

        Actually sounds like a privacy nightmare. Dashcams for people, they never forget anything.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Every day, Elon and Donald prove that intelligence and wealth are uncorrelated. Musk said you can't achieve anything significant in less than 14 hours of work a day. Only a sleep deprived idiot who can't work intelligently would say that, and putting a chip in his head wouldn't help with that misperception in the slightest. A couple moments if actual thought would lead to the realization that intelligence has very little to do to with humanity's chances of survival. In fact, it's the second biggest risk

    • I think a calculator, dictionary or just a copy of wikipedia would make you smarter if the access was just as natural as remembering your own name or the capital of France. It would free up a lot of resources for actual smart thinking and possibly the ability to make new brain connections between topics. So, yeah, I would love to have direct brain access to a classical computer (assuming no safety and security issues).

      An AI on the other hand... um... why? I can already accurately recognize a cat. I don't ne

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        As a practical matter there may be limits to the speed we want to interact with the world around us. Just think of Twitter without the fraction of second delay between composing a message and tabbing over to the post button... Sometime a little friction is a good thing

    • What a stupid idiotic snappy answer. You are an imbecile.

    • Well, in research circles, intelligence is generally regarded as multidimensional (in contrast to the gross oversimplification that is IQ). IIRC, one of the dimensions is generally regarded as being memory performance - i.e. you can have the best logical apparatus in the universe sitting in you brain, but if your memory capacity is basically zero, you still wouldn't be considered 'overall intelligent'. Same goes vice versa - only having a great memory doesn't make you smart.
      So, if an implanted chip could s
  • by frootcakeuk ( 638517 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @05:49AM (#57976272)
    ...Elon Musk has lost his fucking mind and is trying to replace it artificially.
  • However, the smartphone is easier to upgrade and it's easier to secure it if you don't trust it.

    And as it stands in the current climate, I don't see any reason whatsoever to trust anyone. So unless I acquire the knowledge to thoroughly check such a chip's specs and am enabled to actually do that, I don't think this is going to be a thing for me.

    OTOH, if they ever build a better digestive system or bionic eye, I'll probably get one of those but then my biological factory devices are rather suspect already.

    • I agree that actually implanting the complex hardware into the body seems foolish. Having the computer implanted makes upgrading, and patching it monumentally harder. Why not just install a dumb neural interface that provides for an external port or something. Then the chip or computer could be a very small wearable device that can be upgraded, patched, repaired, or even replaced without any more inconvenience to the user than unplugging it.

  • Humanity can get along fine without implanted supercomputers, but they would make capitalism viable for longer.

  • No new information here, just a rehash of the Axios/HBO interview from two months ago: https://www.axios.com/elon-mus... [axios.com]

    Also, I think "AI hardware chip" is just a made-up clickbait title. It is more about an interface. One may lead to another, but this misrepresentation makes the Neuralink mission sound more outlandish than it is. There are already "we are nowhere near true (general) AI" trigger responses in this thread.

  • The idea is to have a higher data transfer rate, because the transfer rate of the current phone input-output mechanism is not fast enough.
    I would argue that most people will not be able to handle the speeds at which data will be delivered if they need to manage that real time.

  • Smarter? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @06:42AM (#57976376)
    "How much smarter are you with a phone or computer or without? You're vastly smarter, actually," Musk said. "You can answer any question pretty much instantly. You can remember flawlessly.

    .

    Of course, since Google searches only return correct information, Wikipedia is never wrong. Everything you read or see on the internet is true.

    • In the same context: my parents and my teachers always gave me correct information and my memory works flawlessly.

      With my phone I am able to perform more tasks and perform them faster than without a phone. I would say that would fit the meaning of 'smarter'.
  • by misnohmer ( 1636461 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @06:47AM (#57976382)

    "I'm still pro-humanity"... until I'm not. I have tunnels under your cities, satellites over them and rockets able to strike anywhere on earth. "You will be assimilated, resistance is futile!"

  • by gringer ( 252588 )

    I think that the device Dr. Mary Lou Jepsen is creating is a better technology, because it's a lot less invasive, and can be removed by hand without the use of surgical tools:

    https://www.openwater.cc/techn... [openwater.cc]

    We use an utterly unconventional approach that enables us to leapfrog MRI technology by using the scattering of the body or the brain itself to focus infrared light to scan the brain or body bit by bit or voxel by voxel. This is enabled by LCDs with pixels small enough to create reconstructive holographic images that neutralize the scattering and enable scanning at MRI resolution and depth coupled with the use of body-temperature detectors. These LCDs and detectors line the inside of a ski-hat, bandage or other clothing.

  • by WhatHump ( 951645 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @07:32AM (#57976462)

    Can someone at Tesla please get a urine sample from Mr. Musk? My daughter, a chemist, would like to run an analysis on it to see what the hell is in his coffee.

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Yeah, this is an especially odd comment coming from him, considering that he's been warning about a hostile AI takeover for awhile now.

      Maybe Joe Rogan spiked his blunt with something.... I don't know.

      • by olau ( 314197 )

        Why do you think it's odd? If AIs can be super-AIs because of man-made hardware, then perhaps humans can pull the same trick and not end up with the short end of the stick?

        All he's saying is that for this to actually work, we probably need a better hardware interface than eyeballs and keyboards.

  • Elon Musk Wants To Put An AI Hardware Chip In Your Skull

    And I wanna fuck Angie Dickinson. Let's see which one of us gets lucky first.

  • You see, normal human beings do not walk into or bump into parked fire engines. That makes the occasional interaction between a Tesla and a fire truck reflects badly on the Tesla. Once all the humans have the same AI, they too will casually bump to random objects. That will normalize Tesla's behavior. Just saying why we need this.
  • by ebcdic ( 39948 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @07:47AM (#57976496)

    Is that what you want?

  • Go right ahead and stuff one in your head sir. You try it first, I'm going to sit back and watch the show.

    Like the failed experiment we knew as "Google Glasses" didn't really take off after all the hype, so this little idea will go. Some folks will try it, others will scoff at them while the majority will realize how foolish the idea is and ignore it all. However in this case, what are you going to do with it when technology upgrades and the chip in your head ages like an unfortunate tat?

  • I will take the AI chip after reasonable clinical trials; I would rather a skilled neurosurgeon or at least a well-tested autodoc install the chip, though. Elon is *literally* asking to put things into my body all the time and I keep telling him "no, Elon, it's over, god, I am sorry it didn't work out but you have your life and I have mine now - go back to Grimes; she is talented and I think she really liked you" but he just keeps showing up with bioenhancements with which to curry my favor. I've had to cha
  • And how does it get upgraded when better chips are available? Should I wait for one that "grows" into place like the NN 1 inskin from Daniel Keys Moran's "The Long Run" ("The Continuing Time" series)?

    Is that where Musk got the idea? Because that's exactly what he describes.

  • Faster ads?
    • Nah, dude, they'll just feed malware directly into the goddamned thing in your head so your brain gets programmed to buy, buy, buy whatever the hell it is they're pushing.
  • I'd like an SPU. Geeks don't have dedicated hardware for social situations, so we have to do our socializing in software on the CPU, which is very exhausting.
  • Great idea, dude. Then Facebook, Google, Twitter, $THE_COPS, $YOUR_GOVERNMENT, and whoever the ever-loving fuck else there is, can just hoover up everything in your brain directly instead of tricking or beating it out of you. Also imagine the utter unmitigated joy of having a ransomware attack on hardware that resides inside your goddamned skull, or Microsoft feeding ads directly into your brain while you're trying to fucking SLEEP, and so on, and so on, and so on.

    Seriously, Elon Musk, I'm not at all con
  • Wasn't the point of Black mirror, The twilight zone and such TV shows to avoid this lunacy?
  • What he describes is just an ancillary computing resource, not a direct extension of consciousness. Say, a lightning fast calculator instead of a physical one. But it would still indirectly affect your brain - what would a human brain look like after years of never doing any math, but having it automatically done for you? I expect some typically strong neural pathways would atrophy. Is there a chance the other neural nets would grow stronger with higher level thinking afforded by ready access to facts?
  • In my view of the site this is right next to an article on a data breach involving hundreds of millions of people.

    Obviously nothing like this would happen with Musk's technology...

  • Over my cold dead ass will they ever be able to put an implant like that inside of me. If Elon ever tried to force this on the human race, I am going to put up one helluva fight to the death.
  • "make us half human, half artificial intelligence," "My faith in humanity has been a little shaken this year," Musk continues, "but I'm still pro-humanity."

    A year ago he said something about AI destroying mankind. I think he's turning on us!

  • by Paul Fernhout ( 109597 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @09:29AM (#57976882) Homepage

    In a post-scarcity world full of abundance of most basics and no big need to work if you don't want to (like with a basic income or a gift economy or 3D printers and personal robots), why do some unaesthetic and likely unpleasant thing to your brain like stick some hackable chip in it? Why not accept some reasonable limitations put in place by millions of years of evolution about how to have a stable mind and brain? Musk is missing the bigger post-scarcity picture here -- as are most technologists.

    A different world view is possible:
    https://www.pdfernhout.net/pos... [pdfernhout.net]

  • The key thing here isn't the AI component it is the implied brain - internet link. All I can see the AI doing is being a host for more invasive (can you get any more invasive than this?) advertising, tracking - not just your location, but what you're thinking - and "status" information.

    I wouldn't be surprised to learn that it would be possible to get imaging data from a person's eyes, through their brain out to the AI chip and then to the world. Stuff that a person would have no control over and no abili

    • This stuff gets you in the news and gets people thinking of you as being visionary and it it doesn't take much effort to do it once you've got people's ear... you try to keep that impression going. The image helps business. Edison did it like crazy and Tesla probably not even on purpose.

      Sad to see Musk's view on being smart is such that having a smart phone makes you smarter. It's quite functional; that is, his definition is functional. Having tools makes you more capable and perform/function better. Y

  • There are certain advantages to having a computer chip incorporated into our minds to be able to seamlessly transfer data between each other quickly without the meatspace limitation on bandwidth. I could see a certain portion of the population jumping on something like this.

    That said, how long will it be until those who are part of this network collective decide that their way of doing things is obviously superior, and therefore try to force those not part of it into their collective?

    Resistance is futi
  • Is Elon looney tunes or batshit crazy?

  • Musk is one of our times greatest dillusionaries.

  • It will have to have hardware safety governors (or firmware not updatable sans extermal stimulation, and ideally both) to prevent "real jerks" not just from messing around, but also from launching a secret zero day attack during a war.

  • This has been a concept (or even a dream) for many people for decades. Cyberpunk novels treat this idea as almost a staple item in their fictional societies, and that goes back as far as at least the 1980's.

    I think all of this augmented reality tech you see on smartphones and past projects like "Google Glass" also point to a desire to head in that general direction.

    The fact is though? We really have no idea how to tie our electronics in to the human brain so they'd seamlessly inter-operate. Modern medicine

  • The line must be drawn here! This far, no further!

  • I'd try this, if I could move my legs again...

    Just kidding, my legs are fine. But seriously, there are some disabilities / diseases / problems that the risks associated with letting Elon Musk split open your skull, and start adding hardware, might be worth it. The cochlear implant is effectively such a cyborg implant, and many (formerly) deaf people are very grateful for this piece of technology.

    I believe these types of decisions are best left to the individual, or the individual's parents, and not to gover

A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention, with the possible exceptions of handguns and Tequilla. -- Mitch Ratcliffe

Working...