Facebook’s ambitions for the brain are coming into focus


Today, a few thoughts about mind control.

On the occasion of the launch of Facebook Dating last month, I noted here that “a defining feature of Facebook’s approach to product development is its ruthlessness, which often manifests as a kind of shamelessness. If good taste ever dictates that Facebook stay out of a product, history shows that it’s likely to wade right in.”

Facebook’s efforts to develop a brain-computer interface would seem to me to fall into this category. Other companies that found themselves under investigation by various world governments after a series of privacy scandals might ease up a little on the development of products that seek to read our minds. But to Mark Zuckerberg, the risk that the company might fall behind on next-generation computing technologies is too scary to ignore. And so you get developments like this one, from July, when Facebook announced it had worked with researchers at the University of California, San Francisco to build an interface that could successfully decode spoken dialogue from brain signals.

On Monday, we saw another aspect of that ruthless / shameless dynamic playing out. As the company faces multiple antitrust investigations over competition issues, it announced it had acquired CTRL-Labs, maker of a wristband capable of transforming electrical signals from the brain into computer inputs — a so-called “brain click.” (The Verge profiled the company in 2018.) And Facebook paid big for it — between $500 million and $1 billion, Bloomberg reported, making it the biggest acquisition since the company paid $2 billion for Oculus.

Andrew “Boz” Bosworth, who runs hardware at Facebook, explained the acquisition this way in a Facebook post:

The vision for this work is a wristband that lets people control their devices as a natural extension of movement. Here’s how it’ll work: You have neurons in your spinal cord that send electrical signals to your hand muscles telling them to move in specific ways such as to click a mouse or press a button. The wristband will decode those signals and translate them into a digital signal your device can understand, empowering you with control over your digital life. It captures your intention so you can share a photo with a friend using an imperceptible movement or just by, well, intending to.

Technology like this has the potential to open up new creative possibilities and reimagine 19th century inventions in a 21st century world. This is how our interactions in VR and AR can one day look. It can change the way we connect.

Is any of this a good idea? To the extent that a brain-computer interface creates useful input mechanisms for virtual reality goggles or other futuristic hardware — sure! Then again, it will only start with input. It seems unlikely that whatever brain-computer interface that helps guide you through the Oasis will stop there.

Or maybe the Facebook brand prevents the technology from ever getting there in the first place. That’s Ben Thompson’s argument today in a members-only post at Stratechery:

The problem is that the chances of CTRL-Labs technology making it to market in a meaningful way do seem lower with Facebook than with just about anyone else. Indeed, this worry applies to Oculus too: while Facebook’s cash is certainly nice to have, how much of a problem is the brand?

Perhaps none of it will matter, at least if the tech is good enough. Despite my concerns about the incompatibility of the Oculus business model with Facebook’s core business, Facebook executives are convinced it won’t matter if the company beats everyone to the augmented reality market in particular, and this acquisition has the potential to advance whatever lead Facebook may have in the area. That, though, gets at the value question: needing to overcome the Facebook brand means the money from the company is more expensive than it would be from other investors or companies, which is value destructive — not that there is anything Facebook’s investors can do about it.

Or what if it all works a little too well? Matt Levine wonders at Bloomberg:

Honestly one possible interpretation of, uh, recent events is that social media companies are conducting a vast and disturbing experiment on the workings of humanity’s subconscious mind. Now also Facebook will build new ways for our minds to directly manifest physical consequences in the world. What could possibly etc. There is a ton of talk in the tech world about the singularity, about reality as a simulation, about the risk that powerful artificial intelligence could escape from its human creators and take over the world. Perhaps one should read those ideas as metaphors. Perhaps the evil superintelligent robots were us all along.

There’s a long way to go before we’ll find out. In the meantime, I’m struck at how much the acquisition of CTRL-Labs feels like another $1 billion Facebook purchase from way back. When the company bought Instagram, most eyes popped over the price — but not the long-term competition issues. If CTRL-Labs succeeds in building the thing it’s working on today, and cements Facebook’s position as the market leader in AR and VR, will we have wished the Federal Trade Commission had blocked the sale, or put conditions on it?

If it was worth $1 billion to Facebook, I do wonder.

The Ratio

Today in news that could shape public perception of tech platforms.

Trending up: Microsoft is building a new “data dignity” team tasked with researching ways to give users more control of their personal information. The company has been ramping up its privacy efforts in an attempt to differentiate itself from Facebook and Google. (Mary Jo Foley / ZDNet)

Trending sideways: Facebook says it won’t fact-check politicians’ speech, or remove it from the platform, even if it violates hate speech guidelines.

Trending down: Google vetoed a privacy measure at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) that would’ve let the organization’s internet privacy group block projects that undermined user privacy. The W3C is the main organization governs web standards. (Gerrit De Vynck / Bloomberg)

Governing

The EU’s top court ruled that Google does not have to apply the so-called right to be forgotten globally. Currently, the rule gives EU citizens the power to demand data about them be deleted from search results — even if they have committed crimes. French regulators were fighting to have it expanded outside of Europe, but they lost. Here’s more from BBC’s Leo Kelium:

Google had argued that the obligation could be abused by authoritarian governments trying to cover up human rights abuses were it to be applied outside of Europe.

”Since 2014, we’ve worked hard to implement the right to be forgotten in Europe, and to strike a sensible balance between people’s rights of access to information and privacy,” the firm said in a statement following the ECJ ruling.

“It’s good to see that the court agreed with our arguments.”

The court also ruled that links containing information about a person’s sex life or a criminal conviction do not have to be automatically removed:

Instead, it ruled that such listings could be kept where “strictly necessary” for people’s freedom of information rights to be preserved. However, it indicated a high threshold should be applied and that such results should fall down search result listings over time.

”The obligation to demote search results in some cases is particularly interesting as an example of the courts directly interfering with the algorithms used by big tech companies,” commented Peter Church from the law firm Linklaters.

Facebook’s head of global policy and communication Nick Clegg argued “dismembering” the company won’t solve the underlying problems of data privacy or election integrity — but regulating it better will. (Ina Fried / Axios)

Leaked Facebook documents show how poor communication and constant policy updates set content moderators up for failure. (Katie Notopoulos / BuzzFeed)

Industry

About 80 contractors working for Google in Pittsburgh will join the United Steelworkers union after a majority voted for unionization, in the latest effort by tech contractors to secure better wages and benefits. As The Verge’s Colin Lecher explains, gig workers and contractors have long complained about getting only a fraction of the rights and benefits awarded full-time employees:

Google has faced criticism for its use of temporary, vendor, and contract workers, which outnumber full-time employees at the company, but may have significantly lower wages and fewer benefits. While some contractors in the tech industry, such as security guards, have voted to unionize before, a union of tech contractors is more rare. The successful union push could set the stage for more organizing efforts in the industry.

On the anniversary of the Instagram co-founders quitting, former Facebook employees tell CNBC that the acquisition was originally about fending off competition with Google and Twitter, not Instagram itself. (Salvador Rodriguez / CNBC)

Instagram’s Adam Mosseri went on NPR to talk about new strategies to fight bullying and harassment on the platform. (Audie Cornish / NPR)

Amazon announced a huge alliance to demand voice assistant compatibility across the tech industry. Thirty companies signed on to ensure smart speakers work with multiple digital assistants at the same time, but the group conspicuously did not include Google, Apple or Samsung. (Dieter Bohn / The Verge)

TikTok dominates the teen market by using AI to predict what people want to see next. A deep dive in the New Yorker looks at why people love it and describes the company’s US office as “almost laughably opaque & obstructive.” (Jia Tolentino / The New Yorker)

Kapwing, a free tool for editing memes, raised $11 million in a series A fundraising round. The app now boasts 1 million users. (Josh Constine / TechCrunch)

And finally…

Twitter details new policies designed to crack down on financial scams

Sometimes very straightforward sentences make me laugh, as did this one from Sarah Perez:

Twitter today says it’s expanding its policies to prohibit financial scams on its platform — something you’d think would have already been banned, but apparently was never directly addressed through Twitter’s policy documentation.

Twitter has long had problems with crypto scammers — someone pretends to be Elon Musk giving away Bitcoin just as long as you send him $10 first, or whatever. The idea that they got away with it in part because Twitter had never explicitly prohibited money scams is just a very on-brand story for the company.

Talk to us

Send us tips, comments, questions, and brain-computer interfaces: casey@theverge.com and zoe@theverge.com.



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