Science Brain implant startup backed by Bezos and Gates is testing mind-controlled computing on humans





Ashley Capoot
  • Synchron is part of an emerging crop of companies testing technology in the brain-computer interface industry.
  • The system is implanted through the blood vessels and allows patients to operate technology using only their minds.
  • "It helps them engage in ways that we take for granted," Synchron CEO Tom Oxley said.
In a Brooklyn lab stuffed with 3D printers and a makeshift pickleball court, employees at a brain interface startup called Synchron are working on technology designed to transform daily life for people with paralysis.

The Synchron Switch is implanted through the blood vessels to allow people with no or very limited physical mobility to operate technology such as cursors and smart home devices using their mind. So far, the nascent technology has been used on three patients in the U.S. and four in Australia.

"I've seen moments between patient and partner, or patient and spouse, where it's incredibly joyful and empowering to have regained an ability to be a little bit more independent than before," Synchron CEO Tom Oxley told CNBC in an interview. "It helps them engage in ways that we take for granted."

Founded in 2012, Synchron is part of the burgeoning brain-computer interface, or BCI, industry. A BCI is a system that deciphers brain signals and translates them into commands for external technologies. Perhaps the best-known name in the space is Neuralink, thanks to the high profile of founder Elon Musk, who is also the CEO of Tesla, SpaceX and Twitter.

But Musk isn't the only tech billionaire wagering on the eventual transition of BCI from radical science experiment to flourishing medical business. In December, Synchron announced a $75 million financing round that included funding from the investment firms of Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

'More scalable'​

In August 2020, the Food and Drug Administration granted Synchron the Breakthrough Device designation, which is for medical devices that have the potential to provide improved treatment for debilitating or life-threatening conditions. The following year, Synchron became the first company to receive an Investigational Device Exemption from the FDA to conduct trials of a permanently implantable BCI in human patients.

Synchron is enrolling patients in an early feasibility trial, which aims to show that the technology is safe to put in humans. Six patients will be implanted with Synchron's BCI during the study, and Chief Commercial Officer Kurt Haggstrom said the company is currently about halfway through.

The company has no revenue yet, and a spokesperson said Synchron isn't commenting on how much the procedure will eventually cost.

While many competitors have to implant their BCIs through open-brain surgery, Synchron relies on a less invasive approach that builds on decades of existing endovascular techniques, the company said.

Synchron's BCI is inserted through the blood vessels, which Oxley calls the "natural highways" into the brain. Synchron's stent, called the Stentrode, is fitted with tiny sensors and is delivered to the large vein that sits next to the motor cortex. The Stentrode is connected to an antenna that sits under the skin in the chest and collects raw brain data that it sends out of the body to external devices.

Peter Yoo, senior director of neuroscience at Synchron, said since the device is not inserted directly into the brain tissue, the quality of the brain signal isn't perfect. But the brain doesn't like being touched by foreign objects, Yoo said, and the less invasive nature of the procedure makes it more accessible.

"There's roughly about 2,000 interventionalists who can perform these procedures," Yoo told CNBC. "It's a little bit more scalable, compared to, say, open-brain surgery or burr holes, which only neurosurgeons can perform."

For patients with severe paralysis or degenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS, Synchron's technology can help them regain their ability to communicate with friends, family and the outside world, whether through typing, texting or even accessing social media.

Patients can use Synchron's BCI to shop online and manage their health and finances, but Oxley said what often excites them the most is text messaging.

"Losing the ability to text message is incredibly isolating," Oxley said. "Restoring the ability to text message loved ones is a very emotional restoration of power."

In December 2021, Oxley handed over his Twitter account to a patient named Philip O'Keefe, who has ALS and struggles to move his hands. About 20 months earlier, O'Keefe was implanted with Synchron's BCI.

"hello, world! Short tweet. Monumental progress," O'Keefe tweeted on Oxley's page, using the BCI.

Synchron's technology has caught the attention of its competitors. Musk approached the company to discuss a potential investment last year, according to a Reuters report. Synchron declined to comment about the report. Neuralink didn't respond to a request for comment.

Neuralink is developing a BCI that's designed to be inserted directly into the brain tissue, and while the company is not testing its device in humans yet, Musk has said he hopes it will do so this year.

Haggstrom said his company's funding will help accelerate Synchron's product development and push it toward a pivotal clinical trial that would bring the company closer to commercialization.

Khosla Ventures partner Alex Morgan, who led an earlier financing round, said that while Synchron's device may seem like something out of science fiction, it's grounded in "real science" and is already making a significant difference in patients' lives.

"Synchron is actually helping people as of right now, today," he said in an interview. "That, to me, is really exceptional."

In January, the medical journal JAMA Neurology published the peer-reviewed, long-term safety results from a trial of Synchron's BCI system in Australia. The study found that the technology remained safe and didn't deteriorate in signal quality or performance over a 12-month period.

"That was a huge publication for us," Haggstrom said.

Haggstrom said commercialization is key for all the players in the industry.

"I always like to be competitive, and so for me, being first to market is critical," Haggstrom said. "We meet future patients to talk to about their needs and stuff, and so when you see that, and you talk to these families and the caregivers, you want to race as fast as you can to provide them assistance in their daily life."
 
I don't see why everyone is worried about private companies developing mind control technology, if you don't want to be mind controlled you can always choose not to do business with them, this is the main difference between the government and private companies.

Were you alseep throughout the worldwide lockdowns? Government mandated, Vaxxes, Vax passes, border closures, contact tracing?

Were you not watching Canada soon afterward?

freeze.jpg

If you don't think Neuralink and it's ilk will not be used for control purposes. .... well ..... see you in ten, twenty years. bud

Oh nevermind, they'll make sure you never remember reading this post.
 
I don't get how this would work. What if they are mentally ill and constantly having intrusive thoughts about things they don't want to actually happen? Would it take that as a computer command? Like thinking "DELETE THIS" when they actually want to save it and then it deletes it?
What's so helpful for most people is that they aren't trapped in their head all day and their actions can be autonomous of any dumb thoughts they have. There is no easy fix to give people with Locked in syndrome and similar conditions the autonomy most able bodied people have.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: NoReturn
I don't see why everyone is worried about private companies developing mind control technology, if you don't want to be mind controlled you can always choose not to do business with them, this is the main difference between the government and private companies.
You sure can, until every business from the grocery store to the gas station demands you pay with your brain implant, or pay with your phone that requires a brain implant to activate (for security, you see). And then you can't enter the grocery store because anyone not having a brain implant is obviously a danger to society. And then you get fired from your job because you don't have a brain implant so can't access the system to clock in. And then your mortgage gets cancelled because your credit score is too low since not having a brain implant means you aren't a trustworthy person. And then you can't find an apartment because who would loan to someone without a brain implant?
 
I was just about to grab a story for this thread when I realized it had been taken down. Thank god we archive everything: https://archive.is/MPAfa
Here's an archive of the author's tweets about it: https://archive.is/GSBiy
Story is "Don't Make Me Think" by an author going by the psuedonym "Zero HP Lovecraft". I'll admit I don't like the emoji gimmick either, but it's an interesting read to be sure.
I also learned, thanks to reddit, that a similar very-very-short-story exists about a magic earring: https://web.archive.org/web/20131229234101/http://squid314.livejournal.com/332946.html

The better technology gets, the less I want of it.
Hey Johan, here's a thought for you.
Modern machine-learning programs (what we call AI like ChatGPT and similar programs) work by learning. They're like a child trapped in a dark room that only knows what's been passed through a little hole in the door.
If these AIs are being "fed" stories created by humans up until this point, what do they know of themselves?
 
The technology is fantastic and the user case for it is astounding. Of course like any technology hopefully I’m not hacked.
 
  • Optimistic
Reactions: Cyborg Braphog
I don't get how this would work. What if they are mentally ill and constantly having intrusive thoughts about things they don't want to actually happen? Would it take that as a computer command? Like thinking "DELETE THIS" when they actually want to save it and then it deletes it?
What's so helpful for most people is that they aren't trapped in their head all day and their actions can be autonomous of any dumb thoughts they have. There is no easy fix to give people with Locked in syndrome and similar conditions the autonomy most able bodied people have.

At the beginning stages I would expect it to alter mood levels. Perhaps at some stage altering mood to the point where are you are completely docile and suggestable. I think it will take a while for them to actually figure out the brain to the point they can alter, delete, rewrite memories. Probably not in our lifetime.
 
I'm pretty sure I was warned about this in church as a kid.

"The lamb-horned beast from the earth also causes all people to receive the mark of the beast "in their right hand or in their forehead.""


It's just a coincidence.


sweden.jpg
 

In today's reality copying fiction, we have Deus Ex Human Revolution being the winner. Close second is Battle Angel Alita. Then again, 80% of globalist plots seem to hail from that peculiar manga. Special mention goes to Shadowrun Hong Kong as there is a line from a decker to why head computers are a bad idea. (See below)

Remember, ladies and gentlemen. These are the same types of assholes who put an expiration date on your electronics AKA "planned obsolesce". And just like the Troon industry, they would want you to buy ze new chip and talk to ze doktor to update you. And if anything goes wrong, you vill call ze doktor and teknician. And you can bet your ass it would have features you didn't ask for. Like a literal killswitch or perception filter. That you cannot turn off.
 
If I only had two choices, being one of these implants or Canadian healthcare, I'd take the latter any day of the week.
 
  • Feels
Reactions: FuckedOffToff
I feel like the kind of consoomer bugmen who would willingly get these brain implants aren’t they types of people who need to be manipulated in the first place. What’s the point in mind-controlling the brainwashed?
 
  • Agree
Reactions: make_it_so

In today's reality copying fiction, we have Deus Ex Human Revolution being the winner. Close second is Battle Angel Alita. Then again, 80% of globalist plots seem to hail from that peculiar manga. Special mention goes to Shadowrun Hong Kong as there is a line from a decker to why head computers are a bad idea. (See below)

Remember, ladies and gentlemen. These are the same types of assholes who put an expiration date on your electronics AKA "planned obsolesce". And just like the Troon industry, they would want you to buy ze new chip and talk to ze doktor to update you. And if anything goes wrong, you vill call ze doktor and teknician. And you can bet your ass it would have features you didn't ask for. Like a literal killswitch or perception filter. That you cannot turn off.
Encephalon NEXT though.
brain processing = bigger brain power

This is why gene editing is superior new world order shit: genes are way too complex to install kill orders.
they just kill you with cancer instead
 
Encephalon NEXT though.
brain processing = bigger brain power

This is why gene editing is superior new world order shit: genes are way too complex to install kill orders.
they just kill you with cancer instead
Which they are already doing by keeping the existence of cancer treatment that goes beyond chemo a secret in the MSM. And prime the people into accepting chemo via popular media.

As far as the public is concerned, Stage 3, 4 and Metastasis is death. Just pay the morgue and let the hospital give you comfort care as you die.

Also, once the cork on gene editing is fully off, I fully expect some Umbrella tier insanity.
 
Which they are already doing by keeping the existence of cancer treatment that goes beyond chemo a secret in the MSM. And prime the people into accepting chemo via popular media.

As far as the public is concerned, Stage 3, 4 and Metastasis is death. Just pay the morgue and let the hospital give you comfort care as you die.

Also, once the cork on gene editing is fully off, I fully expect some Umbrella tier insanity.
What is the secret cancer treatment? Radioligand therapy?
 
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