Stabroek News Sunday

Hands off my brainwaves: Latin America in race for 'neuroright­s'

- MEXICO CITY, (Thomson Reuters Foundation)

Lawmakers in Latin America are carving out new rights for the human brain in response to advances in neurotechn­ology that make scanning, analyzing and selling mental data ever more possible.

Last month, the Chilean Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision ordering Emotiv, a U.S. producer of a commercial brain scanning tool, to erase the data it had collected on a former Chilean senator, Guido Girardi.

The landmark ruling - it is the first of its kind - was based on a 2021 constituti­onal provision that Giradi himself had proposed, which enshrined protection for "brain activity".

"This ruling is of extreme historical importance," said Rafael Yuste, a brain scientist at New York's Columbia University who founded the Neuroright­s Foundation, which has pushed for legal protection­s for the brain worldwide."This is a real foot in the door for future brain jurisprude­nce," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Chile is not alone; lawmakers across the region are now weighing similar provisions, from Brazil to Mexico to Uruguay.

The court's actions puts Latin America at the forefront of a new race to protect the brain from machine mining and exploitati­on - a fight that pits fast-evolving science against the essence of what it is to be human.

In August, a constituti­onal reform was presented in the Mexican Chamber of Deputies to establish the right to mental privacy. A similar proposal - which also guarantees transparen­cy around algorithms that might proccess brain data - is being considered by lawmakers in Brazil.

"The proposal establishe­s that the privacy and integrity of people, when it comes to mental activity, cannot be violated," said Arturo Sánchez, a Mexican engineer who helped draft the measure.

Emotiv chief comercial officer Kim Old said in emailed comments that the company will "promptly delete Mr. Girardi's account and all associated data".

It has halted sales in Chile, she added. "We will resume sales and support for existing customers when we are able to reassert compliance with Chillean Law and regulation­s."

UNIQUE THREATS

Recent scientific leaps in brain

science are creating "unique threats to mental privacy and freedom of thought that are really unpreceden­ted," said Nita Farahany, a law professor at North Carolina's Duke University who studies the legal and ethical implicatio­ns of neurotechn­ology.

Big tech firms - including Facebook and Instagram's parent company Meta, along with Elon Musk's Neuralink - are developing technology that can detect brain activity then potentiall­y put it to commercial use.

In May, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion approved human studies for Neuralink's brain implants, which had previously been tested on animals.

Mined brain data has endless potential, be it to better target ads, exploit human moods, sell more stuff or regenerate lost brain function.

Already, researcher­s at the University of Texas have decoded human thoughts using noninvasiv­e brain censors. And last month, researcher­s interprete­d facial features and other gestures using brain scans of stroke victims.

Over the past year, neurotechn­ology has been increasing­ly

turning to AI models, which make decoding human brain activity much easier and faster, said Yuste.

"We're opening the door to the possible wholesale decoding of the human brain," he said, creating exciting medical applicatio­ns, but also urgent ethical and legal challenges.

Already similar technologi­es are finding their way to market.

Neuromarke­ting - whereby companies test ads and messages while monitoring subjects' brainwave responses - are now quite common, Farahany said.

And last year Emotiv, the company sued in Chile, launched a partnershi­p with French cosmetics giant L'Oreal to optimize scents based on customers' brainactiv­ity.

'WILD WEST'

When it comes to regulating this emerging industry "right now it's the Wild West," said Farahany, who has argued for the principal of "cognitive liberty", a new guarantee of self-determinat­ion for brains and mental experience­s.

Adam Molnar, the co-founder of Neurable, a firm building headphones that take EEG brain

scans and detect users moods, said companies are working off existing privacy laws and biometric regulation­s.

"We've made the choice to ask users to opt in to using their data to train our algorthims," he said.

In 2021, Chile became the first country to enumerate specific brain-related rights in its constituti­on.

A companion law - which would spell out specific penalties for companies that violate mental privacy - is still being hammered out in the Chilean legislatur­e.

To test the constituti­onal provision, Girardi bought an Emotiv EEG-measuring headset, which sent his brain data to a remote cloud where he says it was used to train an algorithm without his expressed consent.

"Brain data is the next battlegrou­nd for human freedom," said Girardi. "And I never gave Emotiv permission to use mine in that way."

Emotiv advertises its brainwave device as having the ability to detect and monitor various internal conditions - from stress to relaxation to excitement based on the EEG readings.

Brain data is automatica­lly sent to a cloud where it can be used for "scientific and historical research purposes", the company says. Users can opt-out of the data sharing.

Emotiv told the Chilean court that its users already sign consent forms that let it capture their data - and that it would be anonymized before undergoing any research or analysis.

The company spokespers­on added that Emotiv follows the EU's data privacy regime known as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) as well as local privacy regulation­s.

TAKE MORE CARE

Lawyer Moises Sanchez, who argued the case in front of the chilean court, said the ruling would not bar Emotiv from doing all business in Chile.

But it would now have to undergo government review and get approval from the authoritie­s that regulate the transfer of medical devices into the country.

He hoped the message would also send a wider message:

"Any neurotechn­ology company doing business in Chile is going to have to take more care from now on," he said.

The Chilean court declined a request by Giradi and his lawyers to push Emotiv to alter its privacy policies.

Some experts already worry that neurotechn­ology firms will respond to such regulatory regimes by simply nudging users into signing-over their brain data, regardless of the implicatio­ns for their privacy.

"There's a huge commercial interest in creating a world in which you just ask someone to check some boxes, and then you get to use all their brain data," said Micaela Mantenga, an Argentine lawyer who specialize­s in the ethics of video games, an industry where brain data is increasing­ly valued.

Other countries in the region are looking to Chile's model, said José Iglesias, an expert in neuroright­s and labor in Uruguay, where a similar proposal has been floated.

Regulation is pending - and urgent, he said, as foreign tech companies gather data in Latin America then store it elsewhere, leaving consumers with few recourses under current law.

"These technologi­es are being given to us - but we are not producing them," he said. "We should not be naive enough to think that the tech industry will regulate itself."

 ?? ?? Big tech firms are developing technology that can detect brain activity then potentiall­y put it to commercial use. Picture: 123rf
Big tech firms are developing technology that can detect brain activity then potentiall­y put it to commercial use. Picture: 123rf

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