• Lanthanae@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    Conceptually? I’m all for it. Why wouldn’t I be.

    In practice, we live in a capitalist society and I don’t want an arm that makes me watch an advertisement before I open a bag of chips.

  • angstylittlecatboy@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    Not against it on principle, but there’s no way I’d get it knowing about the way the corporations that have the resources to make it happen operate.

  • fubo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    There are a lot of different human faculties that can be augmented!

    We augment our senses every day with tools like microphones, microscopes, radio, radar, telescopes, X-rays, cameras, etc.

    And when our senses fail us, we augment them with eyeglasses, hearing aids, and so on.

    We augment our legs with bicycles, skateboards, cars, airplanes, etc.

    And when our legs fail us, we augment them with braces, crutches, wheelchairs, electric scooters, walkers, etc.

    We augment our memory retrieval with writing, library science, search engines, and regular expressions.

    We augment our ability to measure lengths with rulers, measuring-tapes, and surveying equipment.

    We augment our immune systems with masks, rubber gloves, antiseptics, antibiotics, cancer therapies, water treatment, etc.

    We augment our sexual functions with erotic stories and art, contraceptives, lubricants, sex toys, dating apps, etc.

    We augment our metabolic function with cooking, fermentation, agriculture, selective breeding of crop species, etc.

    We augment our musical abilities with horns, percussion, strings, synthesizers, and more.

    It turns out that augmenting human ability is itself a core human ability.

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    1 year ago

    As a already augmented human, i fully support this.

    Glasses, portable electronic tether, surgery…

  • OprahsedCreature@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Wearable > implantation

    Just a security concern. Augmenting is great but we don’t want the augmentations to become a liability. Obviously there are exceptions to every rule, if we invent a robotic arm replacement for someone who’s lost one, the security concerns are generally lower than the quality of life improvement of having a functioning arm 99% of the time, and there’s an argument for the potential ability for rapid detachment in case of emergency, but once we get into subdermal and brain implants, we’re in a territory where these things can’t be easily removed in case of emergency, and the risks get immense.

  • SkybreakerEngineer@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh, it disgusted me. I craved the strength and certainty of steel; I aspired to the purity of the blessed machine.

    Your kind cling to your flesh, as if it will not decay and fail you. One day, that crude biomass you call a temple will wither, and you will beg my kind to save you.

    But I am already saved.

    For the machine is immortal.

  • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I work as a surgical tech for a living, so obvious bias on modifying the body - making that shit happen is my job! The medical applications are pretty wild - we can replace worn down bones with titanium replacements, or stick a diode in you and makes your heart beat at a specific rate, or replace the chambers in your dick with a manually filled balloon if you can’t get it up anymore (legit, it’s a thing [SFW - seriously]).

    Guessing OP is more directed at non-medical applications; we (society in general) already mostly accept that on an aesthetic front - piercings, tattoos, etc, but we’ve only scratched the surface functionally.

    You might be interested in the concept of “transhumanism” which is kinda the more sci-fi flavor of augmentation, but the better our tech gets, the less ‘fi’ it is.

    Lots of cool ideas, like eye lens prosthetics capable of slapping a HUD on your field of view, or being able to chemically or electrically stimulate a specific part of the brain to pump up your alertness or w/e… how often those ideas manifest as an actual product, eh, mixed results (looking at Musk’s disastrous neurolink garbage).

    There’s also simpler stuff - I saw a documentary on this stuff years ago, and one of the cool examples was a guy that got tiny little rare-earth magnets - little 1mm balls or thereabouts. Dude cut the ends of his fingers all the way down to muscle, and implanted a magnet ball into each one, sewed back up, and let them heal. So, now he can pick up ferrous objections with a poke; and cooler than that, unexpected result was he how has a sense of magnetism! Any time he entered a magnetic field, he could feel feedback from the implants, so he could tell the strength and polarity just by moving his hand through it. And apparently some things generate a magnetic field that you wouldn’t expect - like he noticed feedback when he was cooking on the stove from those those heat coils: when it was on / hot it would move the implants slightly, so he had an extra layer of warning for things like when a coil is hot enough to burn skin but not quite ‘red hot’ because the magnetic feedback was more noticeable than the actual heat it was putting off.

    I’m all for the concept. Definitely wouldn’t recommend a DIY surgery like some of those folks do, but I could definitely see something like non-medical body mod clinics popping up the same way we have tattoo parlors now.

    Pretty fascinating stuff!

    • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Depends on the implant. I have to imagine the only way this kind of thing could be adopted mainstream is for it to be open source, the risks are just too high to let some random company put obfuscated proprietary tech in your brain