When technology can read minds, how will we protect our privacy? | Nita Farahany

167,640 views

2018-12-18 ・ TED


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When technology can read minds, how will we protect our privacy? | Nita Farahany

167,640 views ・ 2018-12-18

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:13
In the months following the 2009 presidential election in Iran,
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protests erupted across the country.
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The Iranian government violently suppressed
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what came to be known as the Iranian Green Movement,
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even blocking mobile signals
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to cut off communication between the protesters.
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My parents, who emigrated to the United States in the late 1960s,
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spend substantial time there,
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where all of my large, extended family live.
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When I would call my family in Tehran
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during some of the most violent crackdowns of the protest,
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none of them dared discuss with me what was happening.
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They or I knew to quickly steer the conversation to other topics.
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All of us understood what the consequences could be
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of a perceived dissident action.
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But I still wish I could have known what they were thinking
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or what they were feeling.
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What if I could have?
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Or more frighteningly,
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what if the Iranian government could have?
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Would they have arrested them based on what their brains revealed?
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That day may be closer than you think.
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With our growing capabilities in neuroscience, artificial intelligence
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and machine learning,
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we may soon know a lot more of what's happening in the human brain.
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As a bioethicist, a lawyer, a philosopher
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and an Iranian-American,
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I'm deeply concerned about what this means for our freedoms
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and what kinds of protections we need.
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I believe we need a right to cognitive liberty,
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as a human right that needs to be protected.
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If not, our freedom of thought,
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access and control over our own brains
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and our mental privacy will be threatened.
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Consider this:
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the average person thinks thousands of thoughts each day.
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As a thought takes form,
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like a math calculation or a number, a word,
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neurons are interacting in the brain,
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creating a miniscule electrical discharge.
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When you have a dominant mental state, like relaxation,
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hundreds and thousands of neurons are firing in the brain,
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creating concurrent electrical discharges in characteristic patterns
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that can be measured with electroencephalography, or EEG.
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In fact, that's what you're seeing right now.
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You're seeing my brain activity that was recorded in real time
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with a simple device that was worn on my head.
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What you're seeing is my brain activity when I was relaxed and curious.
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To share this information with you,
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I wore one of the early consumer-based EEG devices
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like this one,
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which recorded the electrical activity in my brain in real time.
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It's not unlike the fitness trackers that some of you may be wearing
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to measure your heart rate or the steps that you've taken,
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or even your sleep activity.
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It's hardly the most sophisticated neuroimaging technique on the market.
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But it's already the most portable
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and the most likely to impact our everyday lives.
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This is extraordinary.
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Through a simple, wearable device,
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we can literally see inside the human brain
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and learn aspects of our mental landscape without ever uttering a word.
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While we can't reliably decode complex thoughts just yet,
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we can already gauge a person's mood,
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and with the help of artificial intelligence,
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we can even decode some single-digit numbers
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or shapes or simple words that a person is thinking
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or hearing, or seeing.
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Despite some inherent limitations in EEG,
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I think it's safe to say that with our advances in technology,
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more and more of what's happening in the human brain
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can and will be decoded over time.
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Already, using one of these devices,
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an epileptic can know they're going to have an epileptic seizure
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before it happens.
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A paraplegic can type on a computer with their thoughts alone.
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A US-based company has developed a technology to embed these sensors
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into the headrest of automobilies
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so they can track driver concentration,
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distraction and cognitive load while driving.
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Nissan, insurance companies and AAA have all taken note.
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You could even watch this choose-your-own-adventure movie
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"The Moment," which, with an EEG headset,
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changes the movie based on your brain-based reactions,
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giving you a different ending every time your attention wanes.
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This may all sound great,
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and as a bioethicist,
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I am a huge proponent of empowering people
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to take charge of their own health and well-being
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by giving them access to information about themselves,
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including this incredible new brain-decoding technology.
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But I worry.
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I worry that we will voluntarily or involuntarily give up
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our last bastion of freedom, our mental privacy.
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That we will trade our brain activity
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for rebates or discounts on insurance,
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or free access to social-media accounts ...
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or even to keep our jobs.
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In fact, in China,
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the train drivers on the Beijing-Shanghai high-speed rail,
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the busiest of its kind in the world,
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are required to wear EEG devices
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to monitor their brain activity while driving.
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According to some news sources,
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in government-run factories in China,
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the workers are required to wear EEG sensors to monitor their productivity
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and their emotional state at work.
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Workers are even sent home
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if their brains show less-than-stellar concentration on their jobs,
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or emotional agitation.
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It's not going to happen tomorrow,
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but we're headed to a world of brain transparency.
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And I don't think people understand that that could change everything.
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Everything from our definitions of data privacy to our laws,
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to our ideas about freedom.
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In fact, in my lab at Duke University,
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we recently conducted a nationwide study in the United States
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to see if people appreciated
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the sensitivity of their brain information.
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We asked people to rate their perceived sensitivity
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of 33 different kinds of information,
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from their social security numbers
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to the content of their phone conversations,
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their relationship history,
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their emotions, their anxiety,
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the mental images in their mind
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and the thoughts in their mind.
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Shockingly, people rated their social security number as far more sensitive
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than any other kind of information,
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including their brain data.
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I think this is because people don't yet understand
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or believe the implications of this new brain-decoding technology.
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After all, if we can know the inner workings of the human brain,
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our social security numbers are the least of our worries.
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(Laughter)
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Think about it.
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In a world of total brain transparency,
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who would dare have a politically dissident thought?
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Or a creative one?
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I worry that people will self-censor
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in fear of being ostracized by society,
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or that people will lose their jobs because of their waning attention
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or emotional instability,
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or because they're contemplating collective action against their employers.
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That coming out will no longer be an option,
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because people's brains will long ago have revealed their sexual orientation,
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their political ideology
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or their religious preferences,
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well before they were ready to consciously share that information
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with other people.
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I worry about the ability of our laws to keep up with technological change.
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Take the First Amendment of the US Constitution,
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which protects freedom of speech.
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Does it also protect freedom of thought?
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And if so, does that mean that we're free to alter our thoughts however we want?
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Or can the government or society tell us what we can do with our own brains?
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Can the NSA spy on our brains using these new mobile devices?
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Can the companies that collect the brain data through their applications
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sell this information to third parties?
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Right now, no laws prevent them from doing so.
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It could be even more problematic
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in countries that don't share the same freedoms
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enjoyed by people in the United States.
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What would've happened during the Iranian Green Movement
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if the government had been monitoring my family's brain activity,
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and had believed them to be sympathetic to the protesters?
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Is it so far-fetched to imagine a society
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in which people are arrested based on their thoughts
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of committing a crime,
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like in the science-fiction dystopian society in "Minority Report."
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Already, in the United States, in Indiana,
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an 18-year-old was charged with attempting to intimidate his school
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by posting a video of himself shooting people in the hallways ...
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Except the people were zombies
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and the video was of him playing an augmented-reality video game,
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all interpreted to be a mental projection of his subjective intent.
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This is exactly why our brains need special protection.
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If our brains are just as subject to data tracking and aggregation
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as our financial records and transactions,
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if our brains can be hacked and tracked like our online activities,
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our mobile phones and applications,
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then we're on the brink of a dangerous threat to our collective humanity.
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Before you panic,
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I believe that there are solutions to these concerns,
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but we have to start by focusing on the right things.
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When it comes to privacy protections in general,
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I think we're fighting a losing battle
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by trying to restrict the flow of information.
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Instead, we should be focusing on securing rights and remedies
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against the misuse of our information.
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If people had the right to decide how their information was shared,
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and more importantly, have legal redress
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if their information was misused against them,
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say to discriminate against them in an employment setting
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or in health care or education,
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this would go a long way to build trust.
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In fact, in some instances,
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we want to be sharing more of our personal information.
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Studying aggregated information can tell us so much
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about our health and our well-being,
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but to be able to safely share our information,
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we need special protections for mental privacy.
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This is why we need a right to cognitive liberty.
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This right would secure for us our freedom of thought and rumination,
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our freedom of self-determination,
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and it would insure that we have the right to consent to or refuse
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access and alteration of our brains by others.
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This right could be recognized
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as part of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
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which has established mechanisms
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for the enforcement of these kinds of social rights.
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During the Iranian Green Movement,
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the protesters used the internet and good old-fashioned word of mouth
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to coordinate their marches.
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And some of the most oppressive restrictions in Iran
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were lifted as a result.
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But what if the Iranian government had used brain surveillance
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to detect and prevent the protest?
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Would the world have ever heard the protesters' cries?
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The time has come for us to call for a cognitive liberty revolution.
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To make sure that we responsibly advance technology
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that could enable us to embrace the future
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while fiercely protecting all of us from any person, company or government
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that attempts to unlawfully access or alter our innermost lives.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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