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originally posted by: anticitizen
i had this thing with youtube several times.
i thought about a song i never heard on youtube. not even my genre.
and shortly after thinking about it, it was recommended to me.
really stood out between the other songs i usually hear and get recommended.
strangely, i had to type this message again cause ATS crashed and logged me off on my mobile right when i hit the reply button.
Not only do they some how read your mind they broadcast frequencies to mess with your head and to affect the way you feel.
originally posted by: azure1121
a reply to: IndieA
The problem with this stuff is the signals just go right through your face, the stickers you put on your phone are a scam you have to have something that knows exactly what signal is being used and broadcasts a frequency that jams it
Researchers at the University of Texas in Austin unveiled a system which uses artificial intelligence to transform a person’s brain activity into written words. The team of academics, led by computer science doctrinal student Jerry Tang and assistant professor Alex Huth, used a model similar to the one which serves as the basis of ChatGPT to turn brain activity released while “listening to a story or silently imagining telling a story” into a “continuous stream of text.” Unlike other solutions, the system, which the researchers call a “semantic decoder,” does not need surgical implants and is entirely noninvasive.
The decoder learns how to translate an individual’s thoughts as he or she listens to podcasts and the system concurrently measures brain activity with an fMRI scanner.
the current version relies upon an fMRI machine and is therefore impractical for use outside of a laboratory.
Researchers added that the system, which was described in a recent study published in Nature Neuroscience, could not decode words for participants who had not willingly trained the system or who intentionally sought to defy the system. “We take very seriously the concerns that it could be used for bad purposes and have worked to avoid that,” Tang commented. “We want to make sure people only use these types of technologies when they want to and that it helps them.”
The 75-year-old told the New York Times that he left Google so that he can speak openly about the risks of unrestrained AI development – including the spread of misinformation, upheaval in the jobs market and other, more nefarious possibilities. “I console myself with the normal excuse: If I hadn’t done it, somebody else would have,” Hinton said in an interview published on Monday.
originally posted by: IndieA
From what I've heard, the Earth can be used as as a giant MRI machine with today's technology, and satellites could also be involved with monitoring brain signals and vitals.
Years ago scientists found that they could use AI to make better sense of the low voltage signals the brain gives off.
It's been said that voice to skull (V2K) technology has been around since the 90's
As far as privacy invasive predictive software goes, the Shadownet documentary that came out several years ago covered that topic pretty well.
Its hard to know how advanced this technology is today or where it's headed, since I assume that most of it is still highly classified, or to know who all has their hands on it. I've heard that the government has been increasing it's reliance on private contractors, and rumors that the private sector is using this technology, but I'm hesitant to believe that it's being used for advertising.
What can we do?
Here are some ideas:
1. Use a 4G only phone.
2. Turn off all information sharing permissions
3. Cover your phone's cameras, especially the forward facing one.
4.Wear an EMF shielded hat
5. Counter-technology like detectors, scramblers, and jammers.
6. Suck it up.
7. Mess with and try to break the technology, or out those that are misusing and abusing it, however possible.