• Concerns rise as Neuralink fails to provide evidence of brain implant success, raising safety and transparency questions.

• Controversy surrounds Neuralink’s lack of data on surgical capabilities and alarming treatment of monkeys with brain implants.

• While Neuralink touts achievements, experts question true innovation and highlight developments in other brain implant projects.

  • @theneverfox
    link
    English
    24 months ago

    Those weren’t about speed of technology, it was capitalism being capitalism without being held back by regulation or worker protection.

    How many people died designing the Internet? How many died to figure out how to land a rocket booster on a barge? How many people died figuring out mRNA vaccines?

    • @Dagwood222@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      English
      44 months ago

      How many people died designing the Internet? How many died to figure out how to land a rocket booster on a barge? How many people died figuring out mRNA vaccines?

      A lot of people died designing the internet, because the original digital computers were created as a result of code breaking in WW2 and work done by the defense industry to make better missiles.

      Same with space flight. You couldn’t have landed that rocket without the V1 and V2 rockets the Nazis dropped on London.

      You seem to have some idea that scientific progress can occur in an ivory tower, untouched by base ideas like money or war.

      Like it or not, technology grows out of the larger society. If there’s capitalism, capitalism will guide what gets built. Anything else is putting the cart before the horse.

      Might want to catch a few episodes of this series that deals with the history of technology and how ideas become actual inventions.

      https://youtu.be/XetplHcM7aQ

      • @theneverfox
        link
        English
        14 months ago

        See how I picked specific, more recent examples? Ones where OSHA existed?

        That’s the difference. You can’t just damn the whole tech tree because the primitive precursor came about during WW2.

        The turing architecture, which laid the groundwork for everything, wasn’t even about war - it came from a man who was aiming far over the horizon, and used code breaking to fund his dream. His dream was a true AI.

        Same with the rocket - it wasn’t created to kill, it became a tool of death first because that’s how it was funded.

        We can do technology safely. Capitalism and war are both just incentives to do it recklessly. They also shape the form it takes, usually not for the better

        I don’t know why you’re saying technology is responsible for war deaths either… The war drives the technology, not the other way around. Technology changes society and changes war, but you can have both with stagnant technology. At worst, technology magnifies the scale we act on, but it’s not the source.

        Technology comes from people who like to push limits. If you give the right type of people the resources they need, they’ll create it.

        I’ve watched plenty of YouTube videos about the development of tech. It’s interesting, but I prefer the YouTubers who push the limits in their garage… Especially the things that exist but aren’t economically viable, like paint that passively cools or diy algae bioreactors

        • @Dagwood222@lemm.ee
          link
          fedilink
          English
          14 months ago

          Where did I damn all tech?

          I just pointed out that tech doesn’t exist in a vacuum.

          It doesn’t matter how noble the first rocketeers were, their toys ended up as weapons.

          The existence of OSHA proves my point; we only got OSHA because things were so bad that workers started forming Unions, and the Unions had the power to force the government to start protecting the workers.

          If you actually watched the video you’d see what I am saying.