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Comment by BriggyDwiggs42

2 months ago

Were this the case, it would be trivial to read the internal monologue from your brain activity with a device placed on your head. Can you find me examples of medical devices that can do this?

here's an example - you can download and run code for yourself https://github.com/CNN-for-EEG-classification/CNN-EEG

  • That’s just a library that applies a CNN to EEG, but that doesn’t show that it can actually extract text reliably. As far as I know, the machines that successfully do that use the nerve signals to vocal muscles, not the brain directly.

    • and you need to take into account the background I have. (synthetic?) telepathy is what I'm forced to deal with every day (and yes - with nearly no way to prove it to you). radiomyography and microwave auditory effect is the best and most suitable explanation I've managed to find at least somewhat backed up with public scientific papers. no real contradictions, certainly seems more truthful than "evil shamans hate you and your astral implants". I don't have a hard evidence in a form of working device nor can I afford it. keep your pills to yourself

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    • this particular library may not be as reliable as one would like to. but the approach is fairly simplistic and likely without an access to powerful data center computation power. as far as (!) you know - you have already acknowledged existence of such machines. what I'm advocating for is existence of slightly more exotic sensing mechanisms - available to be used en masse straight from the telecom towers. RMG as a successful substitute for EMG (which in turn is a substitute for EEG) in context of deciphering whatever data captured into inner monologue.

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    • also - my suspicions are that promise of this kind of surveillance is precisely the reason for data center construction boom. that and augmented generative pornography with some war simulations on the side