by Michael Snyder
February 26, 2024
from
MichaelSnyder
Website
Many would argue that we are already living in a dystopian society,
but if those that are
currently running things get their way, our
world will soon look far more dystopian than it does now.
Over the past few years, we have seen an
unprecedented explosion of new technologies.
Some of these technologies appear to have the
potential to make life better, but others would give those in
positions of power the ability to watch us, track us, monitor us and
control us like never before.
If you are not concerned about what we are now
witnessing, that is probably because you haven't been paying
attention.
I have a number of examples that I want to share with you in this
article, but I really struggled with how to organize them.
Ultimately, I decided to order them from the least creepy to the
most creepy.
So let's start with palm scanning.
Palm scanners are being deployed at Whole Foods
stores all over the country, and once you are enrolled in the system
you can literally pay for your groceries
by just using your hand...
The palm-recognition system works by linking
a user's payment information with their unique palm print.
If you're an Amazon Prime member, you can
also link it with your Prime account - no need to fumble in the
Amazon app looking for your in-store code any longer.
At Whole Foods, you just hover your palm over
the reader once you're ready to pay and the system will find
your Prime account, apply any discounts, and charge the credit
card you enrolled with.
A Business Insider journalist decided
to give the system a try, and she described what she had to do
in order to enroll...
I followed the instructions on the device,
first scanning my right palm, then my left, which was optional.
The scanner then prompted me to enter my
phone number.
Amazon sent me a text with a link to a page asking
me to verify my card details with the last four digits of my
credit card number and the card's expiry date.
And that was it - it took me to my Amazon One
home page, where I can see my linked phone number, Amazon
account, and payment method.
That is definitely creepy, but the facial
recognition systems that are now being deployed all over the globe
are even creepier.
During the G20 meetings that just took place in
Brazil,
everyone that attended was forced,
"to pass a biometric
validation process by scanning their faces using Serpro's stand
devices"...
Serpro, a Brazilian government data processing agency, is
providing a facial recognition system that was used to
facilitate the accreditation and validation of delegates to a
ministerial meeting of the G20 last week.
During the meeting, which took place on
February 21 and 22, attendees were made to pass a biometric
validation process by scanning their faces using Serpro's stand
devices, according to a post on
the G20 website.
Brazil currently holds the G20 presidency,
which runs till the end of this year.
Serpro's system meets the same standard as
the biometric authentication equipment deployed
in some of Brazil's airports to enable secure and seamless
passenger checks without the need for the physical presentation
of documents, according to the G20 announcement.
You may be thinking that since you aren't a high
ranking government official you don't have anything to worry about.
But it is important to understand that they are
setting a precedent. If they can start getting this technology in
place, it will inevitably be adopted by more and more institutions.
And then someday you may wake up and find that
you can't get a job, open a bank account or buy groceries without
having your face scanned.
What will you do then...?
We are also reaching a point where many people
will soon be running around with technology strapped to their faces
virtually all the time.
The Apple Vision Pro has been making lots of
headlines this month, and Apple is openly telling us that the goal
is to "augment reality" on a continual basis...
There's a lot of pressure on the new Apple
Vision Pro, Apple's long-awaited entry into the world of
computers you wear on your face.
Apple claims that the Vision Pro, which
starts at $3,499, is the beginning of something called "spatial
computing," which basically boils down to running apps all
around you.
And the company's ads for it do not hedge
that pressure even a little:
they show people wearing the Vision
Pro all the time.
At work! Doing laundry! Playing with their
kids!
The ambition is enormous:
to layer apps and
information over the real world - to augment reality.
To me, having a computer strapped to my face
doesn't seem very appealing.
So I am not sure how much this will catch on.
But in the future people may actually have
computer chips or even entire computers
inside their heads...
Elon Musk says
Neuralink's first human trial
participant can control a computer mouse with their brain,
nearly one month after having the company's chip implanted.
But
details remain sparse, and other companies working on
brain-computer interfaces appear to have so far cleared more
technological hurdles than Neuralink.
"Progress is good, patient seems to have made
a full recovery... and is able to control the mouse, move the
mouse around the screen just by thinking," Musk, who owns the
controversial brain chip startup, said in a conversation in an X
Spaces event Monday night.
"We're trying to get as many button presses
as possible from thinking, so that's what we're currently
working on is - can we get left mouse, right mouse, mouse down,
mouse up," he said, "which is kind of needed if you want to
click and drag something, you need mouse down and to hold on
mouse down."
As that CNN article states, many companies out
there are working on brain chips.
These are the early days, and they will
inevitably become a lot more sophisticated. But no matter how they try to spin this new
technology, I am never allowing anyone to put a chip in my head, and
you shouldn't either.
Of course
the elite may not even need to put a
chip into your head to control you, because mind reading technology
is becoming extremely advanced.
For example, just check out what a student at MIT
has just come up with...
A Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
student has created a device that allows humans to communicate
with machines using our minds - and it truly is incredible.
Arnav Kapur created a device called AlterEgo,
which is a wearable type of headset that allows users to
communicate with technology without even speaking a word.
This technology is apparently extremely accurate,
and it has enabled this student to search the Internet
by only using the thoughts in his own head...
The device records signals when the user
hears or thinks of a particular word. This information is then
sent to machines which use the internet to find the answer.
It's kind of like having Google in your head,
which is pretty damn incredible.
Without speaking, typing or doing anything at
all, the device is able to search the internet for the correct
answer before feeding back the information via skull vibrations
into the inner ear.
Apparently, the answer presents itself in a
similar way to a person's internal voice, but without
interfering with their ‘usual auditory perception'.
I am extremely impressed with what he has been
able to accomplish.
But this sort of technology is also incredibly
dangerous. Just imagine what a
global
tyrant could do with
this sort of power.
The last example that I want to share with you
may not be the most dangerous, but to me it is definitely
the most creepy...
A Spanish-Dutch artist is set to marry an AI
hologram this summer, with the groundbreaking union ushering in
a weird new era of human-robot relationships.
Alicia Framis will marry her holographic
partner, AILex, who was trained from the profile information of
her previous romantic partners, according to a press release
from the artist's publicity team.
The press release said that the
unconventional ceremony will take place at the Depot Boijmans
Van Beuningen Museum in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
The ceremony will feature a "unique ritual
for the union between a human and an avatar," and guests will be
served "molecular food that can be enjoyed by both humans and
humanoid entities," it said.
This woman really does intend to "marry" an AI
hologram.
Sadly, as technology and reality continue to
merge, the distinction between what is "real" and what is "digital"
will get fuzzier and fuzzier.
As I
have discussed previously, we have reached a time in our history
when artificial intelligence (AI) is progressing at an exponential rate.
If left unchecked, AI will completely turn our
world upside down in less than a decade.
Many will eagerly welcome the changes that are
happening, but I am entirely convinced that all of this technology
is opening a door for horrors that most of us cannot even imagine
right now.
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