The only privacy we have left is what’s in our heads, and that will soon be public

The only privacy we have left is what’s in our heads, and that will soon be public

Your brain might be your greatest asset – and your most private. But soon, your brain’s data could be at the centre of a new wave of intellectual interference and disinformation – one that could exceed the fears around generative AI.

Though neurotechnology, which can read and even influence the brain’s patterns and electrical activity, has existed for some time in the medical context of monitoring neurological conditions, consumer devices will soon hit the mainstream. Apple’s Vision Pro, which offers rudimentary neurotechnology through iris-tracking cameras will be released on February 2, while Meta’s neural smart watch is expected in early 2025.

Illustration: Dionne Gain

Recent advances in neuroscience and AI are paving the way for improved consumer applications. These include complex and invasive BCIs – brain-computer interfaces – like Elon Musk’s Neuralink, which has just announced a successful brain implant, which could, for example, let a paralysed person type, or play video games.

This new era of consumer neurotechnology will herald unprecedented disinformation, influence and interference.

As the last piece in the jigsaw puzzle of data collection, neurotechnology and the brain data it collects offers those who own and access this information insight into an individual’s thoughts and emotions. It goes beyond the likes, swipes and clicks to capture unconscious reactions, individual bias, feelings, preferences and emotional states.

Disinformation will be supercharged by the introduction of neurotechnology. Generative AI – algorithms such as ChatGPT that draw on vast training data to generate streams of “new” content using prompts – can rapidly create and distribute disinformation tailored to the individual. However, neurotechnology and AI will build on the vast data already in existence to customise and adjust content to cater to each individual’s specific feelings and current emotional state – offering the ability to create a feedback loop fuelled by brain data. A simple example would be where, while scrolling through your news feed, you have a positive emotional response to reading a statement of hate speech. A social media platform could then set its algorithm to feed your brain more of the same content to elicit the positive response again.

As Duke University law professor Nita Farahany explains, the commercialisation of this technology poses serious risks. “You have the same tech company that has access to … brain data that’s [also] driving the environment that the person is operating in, like an immersive or spatial computing environment, where it almost becomes like people are in a matrix that is operated by a foreign adversary.”

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Until a now, much of the policy conversations around addressing these dangers have focused on areas such as content moderation, and dealing directly with the platforms that enable the dissemination of generative AI-produced disinformation. However, with the introduction of neurotechnology, it is the cognitive liberty and resilience of individuals that can be manipulated through changes in algorithms that respond to inputs from brain data.

“I fear that’s an insidious way of really getting at social control in ways that would be very difficult to counteract and to even detect,” says Farahany, a leading scholar on the ethical, legal, and social implications of emerging technologies. “To me, cognitive liberty is a national security requirement for countries to start to embed into products and to say brain data is uniquely sensitive and uniquely valuable … It needs to live on device. It needs to live in the hands of individuals.”

With 2024 set to be the biggest election year in history – more than 50 per cent of the world’s population will be casting their votes – disinformation will be front-of-mind for the protection of democracy. Yet, global efforts to date have struggled to tackle this issue. Without urgent action, the risk of supercharged disinformation and interference – powered by brain data and generative AI – will present a grave challenge to the digital landscape and democracy worldwide.

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Preparing for the widespread adoption of consumer neurotechnology is critical, now. As it becomes commercially available, there must be the appropriate protections in place. We must recognise the significance of brain data – arguably the most intimate form of data available – with a particular focus on its collection, storage and use. This includes who controls that data and how they employ it.

No group should have unlimited or unregulated access to our data and how we feel and react. The level of influence that this affords – be it large technology companies that collect much of our data and operate our social media feeds, government who hold much of our other important credentials, or any other group – is too large.

We could ensure, for example, that brain data remains, and is processed, on-device and that only the data needed to operate interactions – such as whether to swipe right or left, or click – is accessed and the rest stays with the user. Updating international human rights to consider cognitive liberty will also be an important step. Irrespective of how it is achieved, we must ensure rigorous regulation of our brain data and its use – both now and into the future. Not doing so risks significant breaches of privacy, discriminatory conduct, waves of disinformation and the loss of the final frontier; our cognitive liberty.

Dr Miah Hammond-Errey is the director and Tom Barrett is a research associate of emerging technology for the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney. Dr Miah Hammond-Errey is also host of the Technology & Security podcast.

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