12-17-2024, 08:40 AM
Xpcv Jonathan Franzen: More authors should pay attention to the questions science fiction raises
As the saga of London rioting and social media blocking continues, the British government is calling in the stanley cup spooks. They ;re now summoning MI5 and GCHQ to help not block but track the messages that might be the root of the trouble. Christ. As if Prime Minister David Cameron stanley cup plan to block social networking wasn ;t enough, British military intelligence and the Government Communications Headquarters will work in concert to try to track down riotous dissidents broadcasting calls to violence. That includes cracking BBM messages that would otherwise be secure behind the BBM network. Right, as that worked so well before. https://gizmodo/uk-prime-ministers-anti-...ss-5829910 stanley cup While both groups are acting within the confines of the law, it seems they barely toe the line if they haven ;t already crossed it. It is their duty to root out those who would do harm to people and property, yes. And RIM is obligated by law to submit information about their customers, if not their actual messages, if the government calls for it. But breaking into a secure network without a clear target sounds closely akin to phone tapping, doesn ;t it Especially when it could affect those innocent of any wrongdoing. [The Guardian] Photo: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty BlackBerryGCHQriots Rrmr TSA Finds Gun-Stuffed Mickey Mouse in Four Year-Old s Luggage
Well, it finally happened. As we reported last week, scientists have successfully enhanced the intelligence of rhesus monkeys using a brain impla stanley water jug nt, albeit temporarily. Futurists and science fiction authors have speculated about this possibility for years 鈥?and now the reality is upon us. And it clear that this precedent-setting breakthrough is just the tip of the iceber stanley becher g: Ongoing advancements in pharmacology, genetics, and cybernetics hold huge promise for the further development of uplift technologies. https://gizmodo/scientists-make-monkeys-...-c-5943379 The question now is: Should we go around enhancing the brains of other living creatures Do we have the right Would we live to regret it To help us better understand the implications of this breakthrough, we spoke to futurist David Brin, author of Existence and the Uplift saga both of which feature uplift scenarios , and bioethicist James Hughes from Trinity College in Connecticut and director of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. It became clear through our conversations with them that animal enhancement is about to become very real, a development that will irrevocably alter our relationship with the animal kingdom. The challenge, they say, will be in doing it safely and smartly. The limits of of science fiction As is typically the case, science fiction has given us a tremendous head start in thi stanley deutschland nking about these issues. Writers such as H.G. Wells, Pi
As the saga of London rioting and social media blocking continues, the British government is calling in the stanley cup spooks. They ;re now summoning MI5 and GCHQ to help not block but track the messages that might be the root of the trouble. Christ. As if Prime Minister David Cameron stanley cup plan to block social networking wasn ;t enough, British military intelligence and the Government Communications Headquarters will work in concert to try to track down riotous dissidents broadcasting calls to violence. That includes cracking BBM messages that would otherwise be secure behind the BBM network. Right, as that worked so well before. https://gizmodo/uk-prime-ministers-anti-...ss-5829910 stanley cup While both groups are acting within the confines of the law, it seems they barely toe the line if they haven ;t already crossed it. It is their duty to root out those who would do harm to people and property, yes. And RIM is obligated by law to submit information about their customers, if not their actual messages, if the government calls for it. But breaking into a secure network without a clear target sounds closely akin to phone tapping, doesn ;t it Especially when it could affect those innocent of any wrongdoing. [The Guardian] Photo: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty BlackBerryGCHQriots Rrmr TSA Finds Gun-Stuffed Mickey Mouse in Four Year-Old s Luggage
Well, it finally happened. As we reported last week, scientists have successfully enhanced the intelligence of rhesus monkeys using a brain impla stanley water jug nt, albeit temporarily. Futurists and science fiction authors have speculated about this possibility for years 鈥?and now the reality is upon us. And it clear that this precedent-setting breakthrough is just the tip of the iceber stanley becher g: Ongoing advancements in pharmacology, genetics, and cybernetics hold huge promise for the further development of uplift technologies. https://gizmodo/scientists-make-monkeys-...-c-5943379 The question now is: Should we go around enhancing the brains of other living creatures Do we have the right Would we live to regret it To help us better understand the implications of this breakthrough, we spoke to futurist David Brin, author of Existence and the Uplift saga both of which feature uplift scenarios , and bioethicist James Hughes from Trinity College in Connecticut and director of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. It became clear through our conversations with them that animal enhancement is about to become very real, a development that will irrevocably alter our relationship with the animal kingdom. The challenge, they say, will be in doing it safely and smartly. The limits of of science fiction As is typically the case, science fiction has given us a tremendous head start in thi stanley deutschland nking about these issues. Writers such as H.G. Wells, Pi

