MARK OF THE BEAST WATCH: Feds’ believe they now can have technology capable of gathering information from the brain
A government program is describing as “attainable” the goal of developing technology that can read information from the human brain, or write information there, without any invasive hardware, reports Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin. In recent years, increasingly sophisticated ways have been developed to enable a person’s brain to communicate with a device. Such access to computers and the Web has helped people with brain injuries.
But those processes always employed “invasive techniques” and are “not appropriate for able-bodied people,” according to a new report from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA.The agency is launching the Next-Generation Nonsurgical Neurotechnology programs to move past the limited-scope, noninvasive neurotechnologies that already exist, such as the electroencephalogram and transcranial direct current stimulation. READ MORE