Neuralink Co-Founder Suggests He Left Elon Musk's Company Over Safety Concerns

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Elon Musk News

Neuralink,Neuroscience,Wall Street Journal

'For a medical device, safety often implies minimal invasiveness,' Dr. Benjamin Rapoport recently told the WSJ.

Would you let Elon Musk tinker with your brain? That’s a question we all might be facing in the future if his brain-computer interface company Neuralink succeeds. But anyone who’s ready to raise their hands for brain surgery might want to hear what one of the Neuralink co-founders recently said during an interview with the Wall Street Journal. The Wall Street Journal podcast The Future of Everything recently sat down with Dr.

Rapaport goes on to say he formed Precision Neuroscience with that philosophy in mind. It was crucial to focus on “minimal invasiveness, scalability, and safety” when producing neural interfaces. And he believes that’s what sets his company apart from Neuralink. “The Neuralink system is based on penetrating microelectrodes. The Precision system is based on surface microelectrodes, which are tiny little electrodes that coat the surface of the brain without penetrating it,” Rapaport explained.

 

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