The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) offers a great commentary by Eva Galperin that describes traitorware: “devices that act behind your back to betray your privacy.” Basically, she’s describing nearly every digital tool that we use and carry, from printers to cell phones and CDs. Somebody is collecting all kinds of information about you in non-volunteered ways. This information includes your location and movements, device identity codes, all of the very intimate details of your life and activities. This term acts as a wake up call: the technology is only going to evolve to detect and discover more details about our selves and our environment.
Coaching moment: The alarming thing about this post, and why I’m happy that EFF is watching developments in this area, is that surreptitious tracking is non-voluntary. We do not know when we purchase our devices what kind of information is being collected and sent back to various hidden interests. The collection of details includes information that we may not wish to share with unknown sources, for unknown purposes about our location, our social network, or personal health, or any other details about our existence. Do we have a choice? More now than we will if we do nothing until later. Write a letter to your congressperson. Talk with your friends. Turn off Fox. Hey, if you’d like to thank EFF for their work in this area, here’s one way.
NewScientist has an article, Evesdropping on the Music of the Brain, in which they described how philosopher Dan Lloyd created software that gave a musical interpretation to signals generated by a functional MRI. While brain music is interesting by itself, NewScientist asked if there could be other uses for the information presented in this way.
Could identifying such aural differences ever be useful? Daniel Levitin, a neuroscientist at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, thinks they might. He says brain music’s killer application might be in allowing researchers to home in on patterns that suggest a particular region is interesting and that wouldn’t be detectable using the eye alone. They could analyse these regions more closely using conventional imaging.
His colleague Didier Grandjean at the University of Geneva in Switzerland says that brain music might help identify temporal patterns in particular. “Melodies are a much better way to build complex mental representations over time than anything the eye can do,” he says.
I can imagine that the visualization (MRI pictures) and the “music” could be useful for bio-feedback as well as for diagnosis. For example, the TED Conference has a four minute video by Christopher deCharms on using MRI to control your brain in order to manage your pain.
Coaching moment: As medical diagnostic and interpretive procedures become more creative and useful, we are at greater risk for being denied medical insurance or benefits, or otherwise marginalized by our records. This is a most important time to make your voice heard in the health care matter that is being discussed in Congress right now. Do you want health care that is based on risk (calculated by your insurers) or based on your health? Here’s a link to find out about the proposed health care legislation or to identify and contact your senators and representatives. I strongly urge you to speak for yourself on this issue.