Sunday, October 29, 2017

IMAGE OF THE BEAST WATCH: The New Religions Obsessed with Artificial Intelligence

IMAGE OF THE BEAST WATCH: The New Religions Obsessed with Artificial Intelligence


What has improved American lives most in the last 50 years? According to a Pew Research study reported this month, it’s not civil rights (10 percent) or politics (2 percent): it’s technology (42 percent).
And yet, according to other studies, most Americans are wary of technology, especially in areas of automation (72 percent), or robotic caregivers (59 percent), or riding in driverless vehicles (56 percent), and even in using brain chip implants to augment the capabilities of healthy people (69 percent).  Science fiction, however, is quickly becoming science fact—the future is the machine.


This is leading many to argue that we need to anticipate the ethical questions now, rather than when it is too late. And increasingly, those taking up these challenges are religious and spiritual. How far should we integrate human physiology with technology? What do we do with self-aware androids—like Blade Runner’s replicants—and self-aware supercomputers? Or the merging of our brains with them? If Ray Kurzweil’s famous singularity—a future in which the exponential growth of technology turns into a runaway train—becomes a reality, does religion have something to offer in response? CONTINUE



Fears Of New iPhone Facial Recognition Paving The Way For Big Brother

Fears Of New iPhone Facial Recognition Paving The Way For Big Brother
Apple will let you unlock the iPhone X with your face — a move likely to bring facial recognition to the masses, along with concerns over how the technology may be used for nefarious purposes. Apple’s newest device, set to go on sale November 3, is designed to be unlocked with a facial scan with a number of privacy safeguards — as the data will only be stored on the phone and not in any databases. Unlocking one’s phone with a face scan may offer added convenience and security for iPhone users, according to
Apple, which claims its “neural engine” for FaceID cannot be tricked by a photo or hacker. While other devices have offered facial recognition, Apple is the first to pack the technology allowing for a three-dimensional scan into a hand-held phone. But despite Apple’s safeguards, privacy activists fear the widespread use of facial recognition would “normalize” the technology and open the door to broader use by law enforcement, marketers or others of a largely unregulated tool. READ MORE


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5 comments:

  1. Like everything else,technology will be used by the elitists to eradicate and enslave.

    ReplyDelete
  2. A lot of people think the mark of the beast will be a chip ,is it not more likely it will be a spiritual mark ,a baptism of some kind ?

    ReplyDelete
  3. counterfeit baptism yes but the chip will be apart of program

    ReplyDelete