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14 Dec 2004 21:59:34 -0000

 

Get Ready for Matrix

press-release

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

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

 

 

ISIS Press Release 14/12/04

 

Get Ready for Matrix

******************

 

Body & Mind Control Implants

 

Electronic medical implants are at least 50 years old, but

new devices are raising unforeseen ethical and social

concerns. Dr. Mae-Wan Ho calls for thorough public debate

and consultation before these devices are let loose on

society

 

The sources for this article are posted on ISIS members'

website http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/matrixFull.php. Details

here http://www.i-sis.org.uk/membership.php

 

Celebrity pain control

 

Hollywood comedian Jerry Lewis, now 78, has suffered from

chronic back pain for years until April 2001, when he

received an implant. The `pain pacemaker' delivers low-

voltage stimulation to his spinal cord to block the pain

messages from reaching his brain, so he no longer feels

pain.

 

Before that, he tried everything to quell his " 37 years of

constant pain " ; analgesics, steroids and cortisone, and was

addicted for 13 years to the painkiller Percodan. He was

about to shoot himself when his young daughter Danielle

walked in and inadvertently brought him back to his senses.

 

That very day, he received a trial model of a neuro-

stimulation device with a hand-held control that sends

electronic pulses to the affected nerves, blocking the pain

message to the brain. Within days, he underwent surgery to

implant electrode leads in his spine and a battery pack just

under the skin near his left hip. And he has been singing

the praises of the device ever since.

 

Jerry Lewis is living in a kind of virtual reality. His back

problem still exists, but he is made to think it doesn't.

 

The implant costs about $10 000 plus doctor and hospital

fees, and is covered by most HMOs and other insurance plans.

It is said to come with a small risk of infection, and

patients with implants cannot have MRI screenings because

the heat on the electrode's metal tips could cause serious

nerve damage.

 

Could a non-implanted, more easily controlled version do

just as well? After all, the trial (pre-implant) model

appeared to have been good enough to convince Jerry Lewis to

accept the implant.

 

In fact, implanted devices are known to have a range of

electronic, mechanical and other problems that has resulted

in massive product recalls by the FDA (see " Electronic

medical implants – promises & perils " , this series

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/EMIPAP.php).

 

Yet newer implants that interface with computers have been

approved, which are raising additional unforeseen ethical

and social concerns.

 

Thought control helps quadriplegic

 

Brain-computer interfaces are developing rapidly to help

paralysed people regain control of their lives and the

ability to communicate.

 

A quadriplegic 25 year-old man had a chip implanted into his

brain in June 2004; and by October, he was able to control a

computer to check his e-mail and play computer games simply

by thinking. He can also turn light on and off and control a

television while talking and moving his head. All of which

is pretty impressive.

 

The chip, BrainGate, is developed by Massachusetts company

Cyberknetics, based on research at Brown University, Rhode

Island. Up to five more patients will be recruited for

further research into the safety and potential utility of

the device.

 

John Donoghue, professor of neuroscience at Brown University

and co-founder of Cyberkinetics in 2001, said BrainGate

could help paralysed people control wheelchairs and

communicate using e-mail and internet-based phone systems.

" Our ultimate goal is to develop the BrainGate System so

that it can be linked to many useful devices, " he said.

 

Donoghue received an innovation award from Discover magazine

for his work.

 

Donoghue's initial research, published in the journal Nature

in 2002, involved an implant to a monkey's brain that

enabled it to play a simple pinball computer game remotely.

The four-millimeter square chip, placed on the surface of

the motor-cortex in the monkey's brain contained 100

electrodes each thinner than a hair, and inserted into

individual brain cells to detect its electrical activity.

The implanted chip is connected to a computer via a small

wire attached to a pedestal mounted on the skull.

 

This invasive brain implant carries risks of infection and

of neurons dying. And if it goes wrong, it cannot be easily

removed.

 

Another research team has raised hopes that brain implants

may not be necessary at all for brain computer interface.

 

Thinking caps

 

Four people put on an electrode-studded " thinking cap " and

were able to control a computer with their thoughts. No

surgery or implant was required. The US researchers reported

their experiment in the Proceedings of the National Academy

of Sciences in December 2004.

 

" The results show that people can learn to use scalp-

recorded electroencephalogram rhythms [brain waves] to

control rapid and accurate movement of a cursor in two

dimensions, " wrote Jonathan Wolpaw and Dennis McFarland of

the New York State Department of Health and State University

of New York, Albany.

 

The thinking caps were tested on four people, two partly

paralysed men who used wheelchairs, a healthy man and a

healthy woman. In the experiments, the four volunteers faced

a video screen wearing the cap with 64 electrodes against

the scalp to record the brain waves.

 

The key was a special adaptive algorithm - a computer

programme - that successively optimised the translation of

filtered brain signals into what the users wanted the

computer to do. It took practice, but all four learned to

move a cursor on the screen in two dimensions, vertically

and horizontally. The two disabled men were better at the

task, possibly because they were more strongly motivated, or

because they have a brain forced to be more adaptable to

cope with the injuries that left them paralysed.

 

" The impressive non-invasive multidimensional control

achieved in the present study suggests that a non-invasive

brain control interface could support clinically useful

operation of a robotic arm, a motorised wheelchair, or a

neuroprosthesis, " the researchers wrote. In movement time,

precision, and accuracy, the results are comparable to those

with invasive implants.

 

Getting ready for matrix?

 

So, is a non-implanted thinking cap an unadulterated good?

For the individuals concerned, no doubt. It is non-invasive

and does not require surgery to remove. It can be put on and

taken off at will. With practice, and with robotic machines

under their control, the users could be more `able-bodied'

than almost anyone else.

 

But brain-computer interface raises new concerns. Could

employers or government agents or the police make people

wear thinking caps while being interviewed so their very

thoughts could be revealed? Could a `disloyal' thought about

one's boss cost a job?

 

And further down the line, could a `death wish' be literally

used to kill people you don't like?

 

Could an evil warlord set off an atomic missile attack just

by thinking?

 

Or enslave the entire world via the internet, when people

could be tagged and implanted with nano-devices without

their knowledge?

 

Brave New World surveillance

 

New electronic tags are indeed here, that enable all one's

records to be instantly recalled, and reciprocally,

potentially allows a computer to know exactly where one is

24 hours a day.

 

In October 2004, a US company, Applied Digital Solutions in

Delray Beach, Florida, got the green light to implant a chip

in a person's arms that can give instant access to the

individual's medical records.

 

The `VeriChip', the size of a grain of rice, is implanted by

injecting under the skin. The company received approval from

the Food and Drug Administration to market the chip in the

United States.

 

VeriChip is a radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag

containing a chip encoded with a unique identification

number and a tiny antenna. To read the tag, a scanner that

emits radio waves is passed over it. The antenna detects the

radio waves emitted by the scanner and generates a tiny

electrical current in the chip to beam back a radio signal

that reveals the ID number.

 

The company says that the tiny implant could be used to

extract a patient's personal and medical records from a

secure database, and could prove useful when, for example,

someone is unconscious or has numerous records at different

clinics that must be pulled together in an emergency.

 

But critics point out that tagged bracelets or cards

carrying medical information are just as effective as an

implanted chip. They warn that the chips might be used to

compulsorily tag and track prisoners, or even foreigners

visiting a country in the name of fighting terrorism. (Some

of us have had our fingerprints and iris patterns recorded

at immigration visiting the United States recently.)

 

" They've crossed a line by placing it under people's skin, "

says Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information

Center, a civil liberties group in Washington DC.

 

RFID tags have been around for over 50 years, although many

of them are larger, battery-powered and actively transmit

data carried on their chips.

 

Smaller, cheaper `passive' chips that only release

information when scanned have been developed over the past

decade, and are now poised to invade many aspects of our

lives. As wireless technology increasingly intrudes into

workplaces and homes, a tagged person will not even be aware

that he or she is being scanned.

 

" The technology is very much coming to the forefront, " says

Dan Mullen, president of Association for Automatic

Identification and Mobility, a trade group based in

Warrendale, Pennsylvania.

 

Most people are already using RFID tags unawares; as in

security badges that allow access to buildings, or in keys

that communicate with a car to allow only the driver in.

Many companies are also starting to use the chips to track

goods shipped from manufacturers to their destination, and

avoid them being mislaid or misplaced.

 

RFID tags are also routinely implanted in pets, so they can

be identified if lost. But VeriChip is the first implant

designed for use in people, and some people have already

been tagged. The Attorney General of Mexico and some of his

staff had chips implanted to limit access to a secure room.

 

Dr. Michael Antoniou of Guy's Hospital, King's College

London, says, " This is really frightening; if this gets over

here then it's totally the end of our rights and freedoms! "

 

The time to debate is now

 

In 2002, ISIS launched a discussion paper, Towards a

Convention on Knowledge

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/conventiononknowledge.php,

jointly with SGR (Scientists for Global Responsibility),

INES (International Network of Engineers and Scientists),

TWN (Third World Network) and Tebtebba (an indigenous

peoples network based in the Philippines), to ensure that

all forms of knowledge, including western science, should be

used responsibly for the good of all.

 

In that paper, we have explicitly warned against implantable

(nano)devices and prostheses that cannot be easily removed

if the individuals so chose. We also stated that people

should not be coerced into accepting those implants.

 

There is an urgent need for thorough public debate and

consultation before these devices are let loose on society.

 

 

 

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

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/matrix.php

 

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press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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