And let's now move to the industry lecture.
How, so I did not really think about a structured way of discussing about the industry lectures.
So what I wanted to actually do simply is to have your impressions.
I have some questions for you, but I just wanted to have first your impressions of this.
So because the key part of these industry lectures, as I mentioned to you in the PowerPoint,
is to have a critical thinking of this, of both.
It's easy to get like, oh, wow, this is so cool.
It's the future.
And it is, I believe so.
But please do tell me what was your impression of all of this.
So let's start.
I will start from the people I see in the list, from Raoul.
Please, Raoul, do you want to start?
Sure.
So I think it's really fun and really cool.
But the problem is I really am kind of uneasy with stuff that are invasive, like the stuff
that Elon Musk proposes, the neural link stuff, basically, because I'm very, I don't really
understand how upgrading should work.
So let's say I install it now and then in five years something better comes out.
So what is it going to be again under surgery?
Or I'm really kind of confused as how these people imagine commercially available for
people that don't really need it as rehabilitation, who have something implanted in their brain,
because I don't really think that's viable.
A lot of stuff is amazing, like using non-invasive, it's really cool.
Having a bracelet, I can read my movements, it's really cool and all that.
But yeah, the invasive stuff are kind of, I don't know, I think they should only be
for rehabilitation purposes and not kind of entertainment and stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, indeed, indeed.
So this is a good point.
And this is what the community tells a lot to us when Elon Musk makes tweets on making
the brain merging with AI.
And I mean, this is of course, it's a good view, long-term view, but at the moment, it's
really, you cannot, we're really far, far behind that having a surgery, if you're healthy,
and then it's not like a fall, it's because that's like a fall, right?
But if you're just implanting in your brain and then a new device is better and you also
could have damage in the part of the brain.
So there is a very strong ethical concern for the healthy user.
But for the user that has spinal pathologies, spinal injuries or stroke, that's highly relevant
because we can restore his loss function.
Although even there, there is ethical concern because what happens if in five years something
better comes and we want to change it.
We cannot, right?
So yeah, it's very important point.
This very important point.
And we can go back to these ethical points.
This is a very important point.
So we'll move to the second I see on my list, which is Mohammed.
Please.
Yeah.
Hi.
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00:26:29 Min
Aufnahmedatum
2021-06-11
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2021-06-11 13:36:41
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