Podcasts about nectome

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Best podcasts about nectome

Latest podcast episodes about nectome

The Comedy Cellar: Live from the Table
Life After Death with Scientist Aurelia Song

The Comedy Cellar: Live from the Table

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2024 60:58


Aurelia Song is the winner of the Brain Preservation Prize and has spent the last several years working to adapt the technology for human use. Her company, Nectome, works to preserve and store brains with the future goal of bringing people back to life.

The Comedy Cellar: Live from the Table
Nectome Will Preserve Your Body, Brain & Memories. Wake You in the Future.- for $10,000

The Comedy Cellar: Live from the Table

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2024 60:58


Aurelia Song is the winner of the Brain Preservation Prize and has spent the last several years working to adapt the technology for human use. Her company, Nectome, works to preserve and store brains with the future goal of bringing people back to life.

SILDAVIA
Vivir para siempre

SILDAVIA

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2023 20:50


Esta es una de las distopías más tratadas en cine y series de ficción. Incluso yo la he tratado alguna vez anteriormente con otro punto de vista, desde el punto de vista de la ciencia. Hoy, vamos a abordar el tema madurado desde un punto de vista filosófico para tratar esta distopía de lo que podría implicar vivir para siempre. ¿Es posible vivir para siempre? La idea de vivir para siempre ha fascinado a la humanidad desde tiempos inmemoriales. ¿Quién no querría disfrutar de la vida sin tener que preocuparse por el envejecimiento, las enfermedades y la muerte? Sin embargo, ¿es realmente posible alcanzar la inmortalidad? ¿Qué implicaciones tendría para la sociedad, la ética y el medio ambiente? En este artículo, exploraremos algunas de las posibles formas de vivir para siempre y sus ventajas y desventajas. La inmortalidad biológica Una forma de vivir para siempre sería lograr la inmortalidad biológica, es decir, detener o revertir el proceso de envejecimiento celular. Algunos organismos, como las medusas Turritopsis dohrnii o las hidras, son capaces de regenerar sus tejidos y evitar el deterioro asociado a la edad. ¿Podría la ciencia aplicar este mecanismo a los seres humanos? Algunos científicos creen que sí, y están investigando diferentes estrategias para lograrlo. Por ejemplo, el biogerontólogo Aubrey de Grey propone una serie de intervenciones terapéuticas para reparar el daño molecular y celular que se acumula con el tiempo. Estas intervenciones incluyen la eliminación de las células senescentes, que dejan de dividirse y secretan sustancias inflamatorias; la restauración de la longitud de los telómeros, que son las estructuras que protegen los extremos de los cromosomas; la prevención de la glicación, que es la reacción química que altera las proteínas; y la eliminación de las mutaciones en el ADN mitocondrial, que afectan a la producción de energía celular. Otra posible vía para alcanzar la inmortalidad biológica sería la manipulación genética. Algunos genes están relacionados con la longevidad, como el gen FOXO3, que regula el estrés oxidativo, la inflamación y el metabolismo. Al modificar estos genes, se podría aumentar la esperanza de vida y la salud de los individuos. De hecho, se ha demostrado que ciertas variantes genéticas están asociadas con una mayor probabilidad de vivir más de 100 años. La inmortalidad biológica tendría algunas ventajas, como la posibilidad de disfrutar de una vida más larga y saludable, sin sufrir las enfermedades y el deterioro físico y mental que conlleva el envejecimiento. Además, se podría aprovechar la experiencia y el conocimiento de las personas mayores, que podrían seguir contribuyendo a la sociedad de forma activa. Sin embargo, también tendría algunos inconvenientes, como el riesgo de sobrepoblación, la escasez de recursos, el aumento de las desigualdades, la pérdida de la diversidad genética y el aburrimiento existencial. Además, la inmortalidad biológica no garantizaría la protección frente a otras causas de muerte, como los accidentes, la violencia o las catástrofes naturales. La inmortalidad digital Otra forma de vivir para siempre sería lograr la inmortalidad digital, es decir, trasladar la conciencia humana a un soporte informático. Esto implicaría crear una copia digital del cerebro, con todos sus recuerdos, personalidad y emociones, y alojarla en un servidor, una nube o un robot. De esta manera, se podría preservar la identidad y la continuidad de la persona más allá de la muerte física. Algunos científicos y empresas están trabajando en esta dirección, utilizando técnicas como la neuroimagen, la inteligencia artificial y la realidad virtual. Por ejemplo, el proyecto BrainEx pretende crear un mapa detallado de la estructura y la actividad del cerebro humano, utilizando escáneres de alta resolución y algoritmos de aprendizaje automático. El objetivo es poder reconstruir el cerebro en un formato digital y simular su funcionamiento. Otro ejemplo es el proyecto Nectome, que ofrece la posibilidad de preservar el cerebro mediante un proceso de vitrificación, que consiste en inyectar un líquido que evita la formación de cristales de hielo y mantiene intactas las conexiones neuronales. El propósito es poder escanear el cerebro en el futuro y extraer la información que contiene. La inmortalidad digital tendría algunas ventajas, como la posibilidad de escapar de las limitaciones del cuerpo físico, explorar nuevos entornos virtuales, interactuar con otras mentes digitales y acceder a una gran cantidad de información y conocimiento. Además, se podría elegir el aspecto, la edad y las características de la representación digital, así como modificarla según las preferencias o las necesidades. Sin embargo, también tendría algunos inconvenientes, como la pérdida de la conexión con el mundo real, la dependencia de la tecnología, la vulnerabilidad a los ataques informáticos, la falta de privacidad y la incertidumbre sobre la autenticidad y la singularidad de la conciencia digital. Además, la inmortalidad digital plantearía cuestiones éticas, legales y sociales, como el derecho a la vida, la propiedad intelectual, la responsabilidad moral y la dignidad humana. Conclusión En conclusión, vivir para siempre es un sueño que ha inspirado a muchas generaciones, pero que también plantea muchos desafíos y dilemas. La ciencia y la tecnología están avanzando hacia la posibilidad de alcanzar la inmortalidad, ya sea biológica o digital, pero aún quedan muchos obstáculos y riesgos que superar. Además, la inmortalidad no es solo una cuestión técnica, sino también filosófica y existencial. ¿Qué sentido tendría la vida si no tuviera fin? ¿Qué valor tendría el tiempo si fuera infinito? ¿Qué implicaría la inmortalidad para la identidad, la libertad y la felicidad humanas? Estas son algunas de las preguntas que deberíamos hacernos antes de aspirar a vivir para siempre. Puedes leer más y comentar en mi web, en el enlace directo: https://luisbermejo.com/este-podcast-te-cambiara-la-vida-zz-podcast-05x17/ Puedes encontrarme y comentar o enviar tu mensaje o preguntar en: WhatsApp: +34 613031122 Paypal: https://paypal.me/Bermejo Bizum: +34613031122 Web: https://luisbermejo.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ZZPodcast/ X (twitters): https://x.com/LuisBermejo y https://x.com/zz_podcast Instagrams: https://www.instagram.com/luisbermejo/ y https://www.instagram.com/zz_podcast/ Canal Telegram: https://t.me/ZZ_Podcast Canal WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va89ttE6buMPHIIure1H Grupo Signal: https://signal.group/#CjQKIHTVyCK430A0dRu_O55cdjRQzmE1qIk36tCdsHHXgYveEhCuPeJhP3PoAqEpKurq_mAc Grupo Whatsapp: https://chat.whatsapp.com/FQadHkgRn00BzSbZzhNviThttps://chat.whatsapp.com/BNHYlv0p0XX7K4YOrOLei0

Ding Dong Darkness Time
DDD: Cryonics and Frozen Dead Guy Days

Ding Dong Darkness Time

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 18:21


A Norwegian man died in 1989 and his grandson had his cryogenically frozen corpse placed into a shed up in Nederland, Colorado. Hijinks ensued, and today an annual festival called Frozen Dead Guy Days is held to celebrate Grandpa Bredo. Learn about this odd American legend and more about the legitimacy (or lack thereof) of human cryonics. There's also a brief dovetail into death aversion. Will we ever be able to successfully resurrect a frozen corpse? Do we want to? Or would it be better to simply upload our consciousness into a simulation? OR HAVE WE ALREADY?Allison covers as many bases as possible in this short episode, but leaves plenty of room for future episodes!Additional Info:Cryonics Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CryonicsFrozen Dead Guy Days: https://frozendeadguydays.comLegends of America Frozen Dead Guy Days article: https://www.legendsofamerica.com/co-frozendeadguy/Crestone End of Life Project: https://informedfinalchoices.org/crestone/about-ceolp/ceolp-history/Nectome brain and memory preservation website: https://nectome.com/https://nectome.com/Show Credits:Graphics -- Nathaniel Dickson: http://ndickson.comIntro Music -- Spencer MorelockBackground Music -- Ken DicksonDing Dong Darkness Time Media:Twitter: @dddarknesstimeInstagram: dddarknesstimeGmail: dddarknesstime@gmail.com

Calls From the Future
Brain uploading, will you do it? with Robert McIntyre - Calls From the Future #41

Calls From the Future

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2021 106:48


Uploading your brain to the internet is closer than you think... thanks to this guy.Our guest, Robert McIntyre, is the CEO of Nectome.Nectome is a Y Combinator from the Winter 2018 batch.Learn more and connect with Robert:Website: https://nectome.com/Email: r@nectome.comLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aurellemListen to more Calls From the Future here: https://bit.ly/2STWsETTIMESTAMPS:   0:03 Archiving human minds       3:58 History of writing & language       9:54 Robert McIntyre & Nectome introduction      16:22 Neuron scanning complexity & number of neurons in different spices      19:27 Storing your thumb & storage size      29:38 Scanning a human brain - the storage capacity      32:30 Electron microscope price      36:27 The storage & compute cost      44:54 Fib-sim image      48:46 Seeing synapses & proteins      50:55 Archiving human minds in the future      55:29 Compute requirements      57:58 Printing or growing a "person" future    1:01:59 Robert's thoughts on the future efforts    1:08:41 Robert's story & cryo-preservation    1:28:54 The sequencing steps for human brains    1:30:15 Much better brain model & the difference between perfusion & diffusion    1:36:19 Taking the technology to market    1:38:02 What is the engram?    1:42:03 When will we be able to use Nectome services    1:45:05 Getting in touch with Robert 

Eavesdroppin‘
Talking to DEAD PEOPLE... Can we really talk to the dead?

Eavesdroppin‘

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 57:38


Can people really talk to the dead?? Oh my days, there's a rollercoaster of content this week, starting with LINE OF DUTY!!! Geordie and Michelle are beside themselves with excitement over Series 6! After a quick discussion about Roz Huntley's earrings and whether people REALLY hang up trackies, Geordie quotes Kate Flemming's immortal line: Listen Michelle... Stop making a tit of yourself and P*SS OFF! Love it!! The pair also decide that Ben Mendelsohn should be next in line for Season 7 - Listen Up Jed Mecurio!! After all the LoD chat, the girls get down to business... Can we talk to dead people? Michelle talks about Automatic Writing and gives some Dos and Don'ts. Geordie talks about ouija boards and recounts a story from our listener, Grace. Cryogenics get a mention, so do avatars that memorialise the dead, along with Black Mirror, Her, The Nutty Professor and DEVS (spoiler alert: if you don't want to know the ending, skip forward when you hear the girls start talking about it!). Geordie's amazing research into Dad Bots and computerised avatars is truly fascinating, along with Eternime , brain embalming and how you really might pronounce Nectome... Geordie chats about whether an app can really help you talk to the dead. Michelle talks about a Japanese hotline to heaven and the pair are enthralled by the My Heritage AI that can bring old phots to life...  Michelle's on the lash with Cuban rum; Geordie's swishing her ice cubes around her Dark n' Stormy and there are NEW DITTIES, TOO! Special thanks to our researcher AL TEGGART and end-music composer Ben Raine. Enjoy the episode and KEEP EAVESDROPPIN'!   If you've got a case you want us to investigate, a story you want to share or a topic you'd like us to chat about, WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU!!!   Listen, like, subscribe, share etc...     Listen on our SPOTIFY!  APPLE PODCASTS https://podcasts.apple.com/.../eavesd...​ GOOGLE PODCASTS https://tinyurl.com/y5n33pys​​​​​​ Plus we have a YOUTUBE channel  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqcuzv-EXizUo4emmt9Pgfw And if none of those take your fancy, please head to wherever you normally listen to podcasts...   #talktothedead #talkingtodeadpeople #automaticwriting #lineofduty #benmendelsohn #dadbot #comedy #comedypodcast #podcast #storytellingpodcast #eavesdroppin #supernatural #AI #mediums #mediumship #talkingtospirits #2birdsyakkin

Hush Hush Society Conspiracy Hour
#017- Mind Uploading

Hush Hush Society Conspiracy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2021 62:58


We dig deep into our minds and unlock the secrets of Mind Uploading or as some call the transfer of consciousness.     Where your physical brain is scanned to create an emulation of your memories, one's self, and even full consciousness, copied into digital form, uploaded and ran on a computer. Possibly even inside an android body?    We peel back the layers and ask all the questions.   Do we live within a simulation like this ourselves? Will we be able to live beyond our physical bodies? Become immortal?   (2:03)  The boys introduce mind uploading or also known as whole brain emulation (WBE) or transfer of consciousness, and the hypothetical process of scanning a physical structure of the to create an emulation of the mental state to include memories and consciousness then copying it to a computer in a digital form, or robot. (4:19)  Mike talks about the process that creates what's known as a SIM or substrate-independent mind and its objective is to be able to sustain person-specific functions of mind. (4:54)  Neuromorphic engineering, a concept developed by Carver Mead an American scientist and engineer, in the late 1980s is mentioned by Fronk and explained by your trio. (8:07)  We discuss some methods of how they could possibly map your brain as well as how much storage the human brain has within. (10:50)  Mike tells an account of where some scientists dissected a mouse brain, the size of a grain of rice and sliced it into 25,000 pieces. (13:10)  A scary thought is brought up...  File corruption, and your preceptors have a chat about how you can modify your files as well as get a virus, similar to a video game. (15:53)  Dave brings up the question of consciousness, what it could be and could it be transmitted into a digital form.  Mike and Fronk add. (18:50)  Mike questions that mental health could be a corrupted file in a hypothetical simulation. (20:00)  Some believe mind uploading is an important proposed life extension technology and is a better alternative to cryogenics as a means of preserving humanity as a species as well as a answer for long distance interstellar travel. (22:48)  Some believe that mind uploading already exists and families such as the Rockefellars, Rothschilds are continuations of ancestral minds in new clone bodies or sleeves (23:30)  Fronk introduces us to the Blue Brain Project, Swiss research group founded in 2005 and your Hushmasters elaborate. (25:02)  The company Nectome, promises to preserve brains in microscopic detail using a high-tech embalming process. Its chemical solution can keep a body intact for hundreds of years.  Han Solo is freaking out! (27:28)  Ray Kurtzweil, the director of engineering at Google  predicts that by 2045, technology will have surpassed human brainpower.  The singularity, and the boys talk about technology and it's fast forward movement. (29:28)  We bring up the question of why we should invest in this technology, climate change, asteroids and our eventual need to leave Earth.  Your Preceptors bring up their ideas and concerns. (37:00)  Dave brings to light a theory of replacing your biological neurotransmitters with something mechanical. (38:00)  Michio Kaku, in collaboration with Science Channel, says we can achieve teleportation using quantum entanglement and whole brain emulation using an advanced MRI machine. (40:00) This raises the topics of morality, philosophical conundrums and the furthering of clone technology.  (43:00)  We question what a brain would need to live outside of a living body, what functions would you need in an android, cyborg or robot. (44:30)  Fronk raises the question if your brain was data, could you be hacked?  We also bring up the parts of the brain responsible for certain functions and split brain people. (49:13)  We talk about what happens when you lose consciousness, whether it be from injury or anesthesia. (51:40)  Mike brings up the fact that even with the positives, there will be groups of people that disagree, as well as extremists even possible bioterrorism. (55:03)  Your trio wraps up and gives us their final thoughts on mind uploading. If you have any questions or comments about the show please contact us at: HushHushSociety@planetmail.com or via Twitter, Facebook & Instagram.     For all listening platforms go to: http://linktr.ee/hushhushsociety   

Long Now: Conversations at The Interval
Engram Preservation: Early Work Towards Mind Uploading: Robert McIntyre

Long Now: Conversations at The Interval

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2020 66:57


Is it possible to preserve and read memories after someone has died? Robert McIntyre thinks it is, and that the technology is closer than most people realize. His company Nectome is working on documenting the physical properties of memory formation, and studying ways to preserve those physical properties after death. McIntyre has already won the Brain Preservation Institutes' "Small Mammal" & "Large Mammal" prizes for preserving a full brain down to the synaptic level, and is now taking the next steps in figuring out how to decode those synapses. These are early experiments, but this is the type of work that will be required if we are someday able to preserve a mind and memories past biological death. Robert McIntyre is a former AI researcher at MIT, where he worked with Marvin Minsky, Patrick Winston, and Gerald Sussman studying the role of embodiment in AI. He left MIT in 02015 to compete for the Brain Preservation Prizes, and is currently CEO of Nectome, a company he founded to further develop brain preservation technology.

Physical Attraction
Startup Nectome Promises Immortality or Death: Can they deliver?

Physical Attraction

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2018 25:04


Nectome took the tech social media world by storm when they announced, at Y Combinator, that they'd kill you for $10,000. Well, they'd kill you and preserve your brain, possibly leading to some kind of digital immortality when they upload your brain to a computer. This was met with excitement, skepticism, and - ultimately - MIT severed ties with the company. We look into the science, ethics, and philosophy of Nectome's proposed brain-uploading scheme. Could it really work? Or is it just a techno-fantasy? www.physicspodcast.com -> Contact us with comments, concerns, suggestions for content, anything you like.  @physicspod on Twitter Thanks to Shelly Fan of Singularity Hub and various writers of the MIT Technology Review. 

Nerdland maandoverzicht wetenschap en technologie
Nerdland maandoverzicht maart 18

Nerdland maandoverzicht wetenschap en technologie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2018 119:31


Wetenschappelijk maandoverzicht van de maand maart 2018 met Hetty Helsmoortel, Jeroen Baert, Kurt Beheydt, Bart Van Peer en Lieven Scheire Inhoud: 0:00:52 linksdraaiend Z-DNA 0:30:05 Venetiaanse bootpaalemoji 00:04:25 Flat Earther Mike Hughes lanceert zichzelf in een zelfgebouwde raket 00:07:31 In Rusland wordt postbezorging per drone getest 00:09:17 Start-up Nectome wil graag je herinneringen uit je hersenen halen en digitaal opslaan. 00:18:57 Rusland wil als eerste een mens op Mars zetten. 00:22:26 Robotbijen naar Mars en op aarde. 00:25:50 Kunnen we de uitgestorven Noordelijke witte neushoorn klonen? 00:31:30 Het nieuwe record voor machinaal oplossen van de Rubik's Cube is 0,38 seconden 00:35:44 Een gloeiend hete donutwolk schiep mogelijks de maan http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~slock/Research/Moon_formation.html 00:39:55 Het euforische Bitcoin feestje lijkt voorbij 00:44:15 Overlijden Stephen Hawking 00:53:30 Musknieuws 1:00:45 Bezosnieuws 1:12:22 Bransonnieuws 1:16:01 Zuckerbergnieuws 1:35:02 Darpa onderzoekt of het de biologie van gewonden soldaten kan vertragen tot er medische hulp is. 1:42:15 XPrize Avatar 1:45:15 Exoskeletten in Belgische bedrijven https://vil.be/project/exoskeletons-for-logistics/ 1:46:54 Er zou een nieuw groot orgaan ontdekt zijn. 1:51:12 Ongevallen met zelfrijdende auto's

Would you like Franchise with that?
Episode 1: The Speculators

Would you like Franchise with that?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2018 37:32


Hey Franchise Fans, last episode was the last episode of WYLFWT, but we are back with a new Show called The Speculators. Check out new episodes here speculatorspodcast.wordpress.com We are putting the first episode in this stream, but if you want to keep listening search for the speculators in iTunes or where ever you get your podcasts. This week we talk about Nectome uploading your brain to the internet, Trump's Space Force/ Space wrestling federation, 90% off Amazon ghost writers and we try and find a new job for Flippy the burger flipping robot. Stop looking in my windows: Robot fails Australian Biohacker Who Implanted Transit Pass in His Hand Was Convicted for Not Using Valid Ticket Tweet us stories or questions @The_Speculators

Would you like Franchise with that?

This week we talk about Nectome uploading your brain to the internet, Trump's Space Force/ Space wrestling federation, 90% off Amazon ghost writers and we try and find a new job for Flippy the burger flipping robot. Stop looking in my windows: Robot fails Australian Biohacker Who Implanted Transit Pass in His Hand Was Convicted for Not Using Valid Ticket Tweet us stories or questions @The_Speculators

We Have Concerns
Lethal Collection

We Have Concerns

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2018 21:08


"What if we told you we could back up your mind?" That's the business pitch of Nectome, a preserve-your-brain-and-upload-it company. Its chemical solution can keep a body intact for hundreds of years, maybe thousands, as a statue of frozen glass. The idea is that someday in the future scientists will scan your bricked brain and turn it into a computer simulation. That way, someone a lot like you, though not exactly you, will smell the flowers again in a data server somewhere. Jeff and Anthony accuse each other of already having undergone the procedure. GET BONUS EPISODES, VIDEO HANGOUTS AND MORE. VISIT: http://patreon.com/wehaveconcerns Get all your sweet We Have Concerns merch by swinging by http://wehaveconcerns.com/shop Hey! If you’re enjoying the show, please take a moment to rate/review it on whatever service you use to listen. Here’s the iTunes link: http://bit.ly/wehaveconcerns And here’s the Stitcher link: http://bit.ly/stitcherwhconcerns Or, you can send us mail! Our address: We Have Concerns c/o WORLD CRIME LEAGUE 1920 Hillhurst Ave #425 Los Angeles, CA 90027-2706 Jeff on Twitter: http://twitter.com/jeffcannata Anthony on Twitter: http://twitter.com/acarboni Today’s story was sent in by Brian Towns: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/610456/a-startup-is-pitching-a-mind-uploading-service-that-is-100-percent-fatal/ If you’ve seen a story you think belongs on the show, send it to wehaveconcernsshow@gmail.com, post in on our Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/WeHaveConcerns/ or leave it on the subreddit: http://reddit.com/r/wehaveconcerns

Two Cyborgs and a Microphone

Two cyborgs discuss Nectome --a startup that advertises to fully preserve your brain including the full connectome at the nanometer scale. As one would expect, there are pros and cons to the procedure. On one hand, this could be a big step toward mind uploading while on the other there is the fact that the procedure is 100% fatal.

Tech45
#379: Echt weer broem-broem doen

Tech45

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2018 47:23


Follow-up HMD is geen Chinees bedrijf, het is een Fins bedrijf Android One Xiaomi Mi A1 Android Go Sarolea Manx7 Onderwerpen Technieuws van op het autosalon van Geneve: elektrische auto’s nemen het over. Vliegende auto’s van het Nederlands bedrijf PAL-V Slimme banden van Pirelli Wat liep er fout bij Apple met Siri? Eerst lazen we: “Ethereum zorgt ervoor dat grafische kaarten duur of zelf niet te krijgen zijn”, maar de geruchtenmolen zegt nu weer iets anders: de recente afnemende interesse zorgt mogelijk voor een verdere prijsstijging. Nvidia komt mogelijk met speciale mining kaarten en wil zelfs liever niet verkopen aan ‘non-gamertypes’. Stephen Hawking is afgelopen woensdag overleden. Nectome, je brein op sterk water. Tips Ruurd: BNR Beter over eHealth & 99% invisible over Bijlmer Toon: Postman Steven: Swiftkey 7.0 Stefaan: Tado

Tech Weekly Podcast UK
Episode 84 - The Internet of Porn (IoP) Nectome, Galaxy S9 and UK porn age checks

Tech Weekly Podcast UK

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2018 37:51


The gang returns with an eclectic mix of tech chat. Can Nectome really download your thoughts - while killing you - to preserve your memories forever in the cloud? We didn't make this up.Then we discuss the brand new Samsung Galaxy S9, phone cameras and crap AR before discussing how the UK should go about contracting a company to age check porn site users. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.