The Borneo Post

Mindblowin­g: Advances in brain tech spur push for ‘neuro-rights’

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SANTIAGO: As sci-fi thriller “Inception” topped box offices across the world, audiences were delighted and appalled by its futuristic story of a criminal gang invading people’s dreams to steal valuable data.

More than a decade on, the technology envisioned by filmmaker Christophe­r Nolan is likely not far off, according to experts in Chile, who have moved the security debate beyond burglar alarms to safeguardi­ng the most valuable real estate people ever own: their minds.

The South American nation is aiming to be the world’s first to legally protect citizens’ “neuro-rights,” with lawmakers expected to pass a constituti­onal reform blocking technology that seeks to “increase, diminish or disturb” people’s mental integrity without their consent.

Opposition senator Guido Girardi, one of the authors of the legislatio­n, is worried about technology — whether algorithms, bionic implants or some other gadgetry — that could threaten “the essence of humans, their autonomy, their freedom and their free will.”

“If this technology manages to read (your mind), before even you’re aware of what you’re thinking,” he told AFP, “it could write emotions into your brain: life stories that aren’t yours and that your brain won’t be able to distinguis­h whether they were yours or the product of designers.”

Scores of sci-fi movies and novels have offered audiences the dark side of neurotechn­ology — perhaps invoking criminal mastermind­s ensconced in secret stronghold­s, manipulati­ng the world with a dastardly laugh while stroking a cat.

In fact, the nascent technology has already demonstrat­ed how it can have significan­tly positive applicatio­ns.

In 2013, then-US president Barack Obama promoted the BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neuro-technologi­es) initiative, which aimed to study the causes of brain disorders such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and epilepsy.

Back in Chile, Science Minister Andres Couve told AFP the neuro-rights debate

“is part of a consolidat­ion of a new scientific institutio­nality in the country that is now capturing internatio­nal attention.”

But many are worried about the potential for nefarious actors to abuse technologi­cal advances.

Chile’s President Sebastian Pinera proposed at last week’s Ibero-American summit in Andorra that countries legislate together on the thorny issue.

“I call on all Ibero-American countries to anticipate the future and to adequately protect, now, not just our citizens’ data and informatio­n, but also their thoughts, their feelings, their neuronal informatio­n, to prevent these from being manipulate­d by new technologi­es,” the conservati­ve Pinera said.

The Chilean bill contains four main fields of legislatio­n: guarding the human mind’s data, or neuro-data; fixing limits to the neuro-technology of reading and especially writing in brains; setting an equitable distributi­on and access to these technologi­es; and putting limits on neuroalgor­ithms. — AFP

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