It's worth noting that this isn't new technology. This paper is specifically about how their new technique provides a small but statistically significant improvement on existing techniques.<p>The fact that they provide code and dataset is really praiseworthy.
Please see my bio for the full rant. The key take-away is:<p>> While we missed the boat on Internet tracking, there is still time to avoid sailing through the final frontier of neural tracking.<p>> Thanks to the BCI, we will soon be offered the trade of our privacy for the convenience of password-free login and faster typing. Next, there will be a quick TSA neural scan prior to boarding...
This is the most pessimistic take on this tech here. You can view anything with the same lens.
I ain't young. I have seen this all play out before. It's just extrapolating based on what we did with cookies, browsing history, cell tower data, etc... unless we pass very strict neural privacy laws, why wouldn't it go the same way?<p>The decent news is that if you search "neural privacy laws," you will find some states are already on top of it, a bit. We need national laws, in every country ASAP. This needs to happen before there are billions in economic inertia behind BCIs.
I’m trying to not be snarky here, but it is difficult to have an optimistic take about an advertising company working on mind reading technology. At some point we have to call a spade a spade, I think.
You should probably view anything meta does through the same lens. They can make great tech but they utterly ruin it with their creepiness.
The way to not get the most pessimistic outcome is to work for a better one, and to do that you have to first recognize the danger
at this point i feel like its just painfully obvious that if this for whatever became feasible/widespread/scalable, it would absolutely be implemented by the powers that be and willed into fruition by gaslighting, fear mongering and misinformation. i dont know how much more proof this world needs that ruling classes can and do want to just subjugate the hell out of everyone & enforce their world view on the world around them
Saying "this is the most pessimistic take" doesn't make for good discussion.<p>Something can have "good takes" but still run an unacceptable risk of ending badly
It's good point! However, one of the main benefits of a technology like this, would be not really for everyday people, but for people with handicap or a speech impediment.<p>I personally have a stammer. While mine is less severe, and I doesn't need directly it, I know several people that would quite be glad of the benefits that it could bring to them. (Example: pass online interviews).<p>I agree however of the privacy concerns. We could limit it in a first time to medical devices for example, or have some privacy laws in place.
I'm not sure whether to be worried or not and I am not talking about whatever you wrote but for your own sake , it seems to be extremely paranoid style of writing
Mark always been framed/stated for stealing user's data or invasing user's privacy but apart from these, this guy has always been one step ahead in making new research, technology possible by experimenting new things. First with the AR/VR which didn't work I guess so he pivoted from that to Rayban glasses, and now this.
The "Metaverse" bet was a bold but lost bet, in hindsight. Mark is fortunate that the Facebook empire is still printing a lot of money to burn, so he could switch his focus to AI now that it's clear AI is the real thing for this decade. This brain-wave thing is a very small wrinkle in the big picture, not really a big strategy shift.
One practical application comes to mind: [China’s Robot Juggernaut Unitree Debuts a $650,000 Personal Gundam ](<a href="https://gizmodo.com/chinas-robot-juggernaut-unitree-debuts-a-650000-personal-gundam-2000757574" rel="nofollow">https://gizmodo.com/chinas-robot-juggernaut-unitree-debuts-a...</a>)
So attended an interesting talk a couple years ago:<p>- fMRI and/or brain implants are the best to figure out brain waves<p>- but they are expensive or invasive<p>- EEG is a lot cheaper and easier but not as precise<p>- BUT what if you used LLMs to analyze EEG data taken at the same time as brain implants etc<p>The answer seemed to be that "yes, you can get better than traditional EEG data using EEG + LLMs". Curious to see where this ends up and hopefully not that like that Black Mirror episode with the brain scanning leading to murders.
Piramidal was doing that last I checked: <a href="https://techcrunch.com/2024/08/23/piramidals-foundation-model-for-brainwaves-could-supercharge-eegs/" rel="nofollow">https://techcrunch.com/2024/08/23/piramidals-foundation-mode...</a>
> “yes, you can get better than traditional EEG data using EEG + LLMs"<p>Not yet. There are plenty of transformer based models out there for EEG but they so far do not outperform the SOTA “traditional” (ML/DL) models.
I still think of this video often and wonder if it is building on any of that technology, almost 10 years old now. Just looking at this whitepaper it seems like they both use some kind of infrared transcranial light, but never imagined the machine in the original iteration was so big
[Regina Dugan's Keynote at Facebook F8 2017 | Inverse]
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCDWKdmwhUI" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCDWKdmwhUI</a>
Are they trying to infer characters/words from brain waves? I would have thought the brain is thinking in concepts rather than actual words
no contradiction, both can be true, you think in concepts, then verbalize, which is what they capture
And you reverse it to go from words to brain waves! Mind reading at a distance.
There were alpha block classes
Now the remaining problem is to make Magnetoencephalography devices affordable and not insanely huge.
why is there no live demo? Anyone seen this in action? Can someone share a demo video or something
The size of that machine
I imagine you’re wanting instead something the size of a hat, but smaller fMRI are certainly in development, for example [0] with discussion about the size at [1].<p>[0] <a href="https://med.umn.edu/news/university-minnesota-developing-compact-and-portable-mri-scanner" rel="nofollow">https://med.umn.edu/news/university-minnesota-developing-com...</a><p>[1] <a href="https://designawards.core77.com/Strategy-Research/95329/A-new-perspective-MRI-Patient-handling-system-for-a-novel-head-only-MRI-system.html" rel="nofollow">https://designawards.core77.com/Strategy-Research/95329/A-ne...</a>
The participants end up looking a bit like Toad from Mariokart.<p>How realistic would it be to make a smaller device?
Patients should get a "My other hat is a superconducting quantum interferometer" hat.
Reminds me of the scene in series Incorporated where a megacorp uses this sort of tech to interrogate an employee from a competitor mega-corp to get at a trade secret.<p>It's a little spooky how real that could now be. Oh and that series was a dystopian series because ofc it was
Someone should try it while sleeping and see if anything is related to a dream.
This wouldn’t work. Apart from it being very difficult to get people to sleep deeply enough for them to dream in machines like this, the brain state is very different whilst asleep compared with awake. Also the data generated from typing would be very different than thought since it’s likely picking up on broad electrical activity in the primary motor cortex.<p>Source: spouse works in a sleep lab studying dreams with MRI
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I hate this because we have crazy billionaires who want to abuse this technology. But apart from tht it's pretty cool, though I hate that it's being developed in this dark day and age. Miserable times.
great news!, I would like to conversate with my dog...i'm sure he has more important thing than lots of people
Now, your dogs may very well be smarter than mine. But here's how I imagine a convo with my dogs would go.<p>- Let's go see what's on the other side of this door, friend, maybe there's food !!<p>Ok, friend, here you go. - opens door.<p>- Wow super cool, now let's go see what's on the other side of this door, friend, maybe there's food !!
If one were to go about translating brain waves from dogs to meaning, we'd run into a big problem immediately: vocabulary resolution.<p>What I mean by that is we'll have a very limited number of words to which a dog's brainwaves can be translated to since we aren't able to understand them beyond their basic instincts of food, survival, fear, affection towards their owner etc.<p>There is just no way to go past what we have already observed by their behavior since dogs can't talk or write.<p>I do wonder how animals think. Perhaps this resolution would also be the theoretical maximum?
>There is just no way to go past what we have already observed by their behavior since dogs can't talk or write.<p>There are many dogs that have been trained to press buttons corresponding to words, in the extreme case tens/hundreds of buttons/words, and they can even construct rudimentary sentences. It doesn't seem insane to me that we could perhaps do a very rudimentary version of this for dogs, given a large enough training set.
Some important ones like, "earthquake", "Seizure", etc...<p>Might be of use.
but that's imposing our language on them, when we should be understanding them<p>there's a movie about that default human hubris, it spoils it though
That's a great point.<p>The "vocabulary resolution being low" basically just means within our own limited context, it's low. But that doesn't mean it's a good measure. Heck, I'd say it isn't.
Does your dog want to converse with you or anyone?
[stub for offtopicness]<p>p.s. come on you guys - this is not what HN is for. You may not owe $megacorp better but you owe this community better if you're participating here.
Feels like the premise for a spy comedy with a protagonist whose mind can’t be read.<p>When the bad guys try they just get the lyrics to Yoko Ono music.
It'll be a cold day in hell before Meta gets access to my brainwaves. Good heavens, can you imagine?
I'm glad that, with any luck, I'll be dead before this kind of thing is commonplace.
2034: brainwave readers are now production-ready<p>2035: every phone comes with one so you can can do things without clicking any yucky buttons<p>2036: China mandates phone manufacturers to capture and submit brain data to the state to protect the children and promote social harmony. EU and US condemn. the media condemns.<p>2037: the EU mandates phone manufacturers to capture and submit brain data to the state to protect the children and fight malinformation. the media applauds.<p>2038: the US, ruled by the blue party, mandates phone manufacturers to capture and submit brain data to the state to protect the children and combat white nationalism. the red party condemns.<p>2039: the US, now ruled by the red party, abolishes the previous law and introduces a new one, mandating phone manufacturers to capture and submit brain data to the state to protect the children and combat illegal immigration. the blue party condemns.
Do they test against people not in their training cohort?
@dang How is this offtopic?<p>Meta has shown remarkable disregard to users' and employees' privacy.<p>Why should that not come up when discussing an entirely new dystopian technology that allows them to invade privacy at scale?
The topic is research into brain-wave decoding.<p>To take some specific piece of research going on in one corner of $BigCorp, and tar it with the brush of general sentiment about $BigCorp, is a classic example of generic tangent: where the topic goes from something specific-and-more-interesting, to something generic-and-more-indignant. We've learned over the years that this is exactly the wrong direction for HN threads to head in. Note this, from <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html">https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html</a>:<p>"<i>Eschew flamebait. Avoid generic tangents.</i>"
It's not a 'general sentiment' or tangent though, it's specifically THE technology that has the potential to make privacy nonexistent.<p>Funded by the company that in the recent past, got exposed trying to track employees computer interactions and grabbing screens. Not long before that, it was leaked that employees and contractors were watching videos recorded from meta/rayban smartglasses.<p>I'm a little bit baffled by the defense here. The point of having guidelines is to use your judgement when applying them.
non-invasive tech from meta? i don't buy that
I tried it all it said was "Hot or not?" before it crashed
A word recondition ration of 78% is still petty poop.
Any minute: wear it permanently to sell training data on LLMs. Take an audited IQ test to negotiate your rate.<p>Better than text-stripping the internet - this thing will soon be pulling the logits as well.
"<i>Please don't post shallow dismissals, especially of other people's work. A good critical comment teaches us something.</i>"<p>"<i>Don't be snarky.</i>"<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html">https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html</a>
Great respect to site guidelines, and to you. Object on both counts.<p>1. The post was obviously bullish / optimistic on the technical capabilities. Not in the least dismissive.<p>2. The economics extrapolation is obvious. See current precedent for paid access for purchased screen-casts of dev work: <a href="https://pdoom.org/open_calls/04_crowd_cast.html" rel="nofollow">https://pdoom.org/open_calls/04_crowd_cast.html</a>
I can actually see this happening someday. Theoretical physicists could charge thousands of dollars an hour.
Coming soon to a Meta office near you: brain-scanning to make sure employees are focused, happy, and productive!<p>There are no layoffs in Ba Sing Se.
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The dystopian future will use this to get passwords/passphrases.
The future is dark.
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Ok, but please don't post unsubstantive comments to Hacker News.
Imagine the shareholder value if he could just beam ads directly in to your brain.
Interesting -- really excited for the future of human-brain interfaces and just in general more interface exploration enabled by large transformers. I'm already very excited by voice, although wish I could get something akin to the subvoc common in scifi novels. Seems like it would be an easier path than human-brain and would allow me to use voice models in public.<p>As an aside, disappointed by the very low quality of comments on this article here.