Spyke
lemmy.world

I'd love to see a future where Starfish has paved the way for less invasive methods of treating various neuro and psychological disorders.

What we'll likely get is some new type of porn thing.

28
EvilFonzyreply
lemmy.world

Anyone putting corporate technology into their bodies is just asking to get Black Mirror'ed. I always thought it would be cool to have my body replaced by a sick robot, but I know I'll never be rich enough to afford the cool one. I'll just be in the Hyundai Bodi or whatever.

30
woelkchenreply
lemmy.world

Anyone putting corporate technology into their bodies is just asking to get Black Mirror’ed.

Pace makers aren't made my anticapitalist cooperatives, you know.

17
themokenreply
startrek.website

Pace makers keep you from dying so they're sort of on a different level of need. Also, if corps did planned obsolescence on one, you're probably not around to buy another.

If they were invented today, they would definitely have a predatory subscription model for "monitoring" your heart, or require occasional maintenance at cost to the end user.

18
Björnreply
swg-empire.de

Didn't someone relatively recently have a prosthetic that needed a new battery that wasn't produced anymore?

7

Give the inventor of modern digital lootboxes and the "license don't own" paradigm the opportunity to put a chip in my brain? Pass

24

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Valve CEO Gabe Newell’s Neuralink competitor is expecting its first brain chip this year | Spyke