Global Brain - The Internet could become conscious by mid-2030s March 15 2008 / by futuretalk
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I’ve heard this theory before and don’t doubt it’s validity. However, I still can’t quite visualize what life will be like once we’re uploading our brains to computers, and everyone seems to have a different opinion… Is it going to be like just backing up your hardware full of memories, lifelogs, etc.? Will it create another “you” or remove the data from your brain to make more space? If the former, then at that point could we create a billion new humans by pressing the copy button? Lots of different ways this could go – what do you think?
Today, when we access a website, or read a newsletter or an article, our thoughts focus on what we are looking at. In a sense, our mind is “on the web.”
As the web gains stronger interactive abilities, such as cameras that track your eyes as you are reading, it could interrupt you at key places in the article and let you know of other similar information that may interest you, and it could automatically display that information for you.
This type of advanced web behavior will attract more of your attention and consume more of your interest until eventually; you may feel that you are becoming part of the web. Your mind becomes an integral part of the web.
Your body may be sitting in front of a monitor or holding a cell phone, but your mind is on the web.
Another form of mind transfer, expected to be in play by mid-2030s or so, includes the ability to continually record your consciousness 24/7 at some secure digital location making your mind available for download to another “housing unit” should disaster strike your body.
This technology guarantees that you cannot suffer an unwanted death. Would we ever find the need to create an extra copy of ourselves? Today, I cannot answer this question.
I can see the huge advantages of enhancing our minds with non-biological neurons when the technology becomes available. With a stronger mind, we would be able to understand and fully take advantage of tomorrow’s “mind” technologies. Today, these wild technologies may seem a bit murky.
Comments welcome.
Here’s a great article about Google’s kinship with the mind. May it blow yours. :)
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