Tech that can decode your brain activity and reveal what you're thinking
and feeling is on the horizon, says legal scholar and ethicist Nita
Farahany. What will it mean for our already violated sense of privacy?
In a cautionary talk, Farahany warns of a society where people are
arrested for merely thinking about committing a crime (like in "Minority
Report") and private interests sell our brain data -- and makes the
case for a right to cognitive liberty that protects our freedom of
thought and self-determination.
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