Cybernetics / NSA Spying - June 10 2013 - Coast to Coast Am - C2CAM Date: 06-10-13
George Noory interviews Dr. Peter Breggin, Kevin Warwick, and David Seaman
About the show:
During the first half, Professor of Cybernetics  at the University of Reading, England, Kevin Warwick spoke about  advances in artificial intelligence, robotics and cyborgs. He defined  the concept of a cyborg as a human who is enhanced through technology to  have extra abilities. It's an intriguing question to explore-- would  you have implants in your eyes if they could give you X-ray vision, or  undergo a procedure so you could communicate telepathically?, he  pondered. If it was a simple, safe procedure to have small implants  installed, many people might consider it, kind of like laser eye  surgery, he suggested. Currently, three students have small magnets  implanted in their fingers as an experiment into expanding their sensory  inputs with sonar, he reported.
Warwick shared details about  robots being developed with biological brains using rat neurons, and how  research like this is helping people with neurological problems. He  touched on his research project involving a robot named Morgui that has  five senses-- vision, hearing, infrared, ultrasonics, and radar, and how  this data is fused together. He also talked about the Turing test, in  which people try to guess whether they are communicating with a human or  artificial intelligence. Warwick foresees robotic or autonomous cars  coming in the near future, in which drivers might switch into this mode  like they do with cruise control when they're on a freeway or toll road.
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In  the latter half, reporter David Seaman discussed the breaking news  about whistleblower Edward Snowden, and the ramification of his  disclosures regarding NSA surveillance of American citizens via the  Internet and telephone. Glenn Greenwald, the journalist who first  received the leaked information, has said that Snowden has given him  thousands of documents, many of which are significant stories. "So, it's  quite possible that by early next week, you and I could be living in a  different kind of world," Seaman remarked, adding that he believes we're  seeing a massive abuse of power, and the disassembling of 4th Amendment  rights.
Seaman suspects that we have not learned the full extent  of the NSA surveillance of American phone calls-- and that in spite of  what we've been told, they may actually have transcripts of all  conversations. We do know they have logs of all calls over the past  seven years, including the numbers you've called, the numbers that have  called you, the length of the calls, and the location data, he said.  Snowden called this an "existential threat to democracy," and while  Pres. Obama and various Senators have defended the surveillance, other  Senators have expressed concern. Seaman is particularly galled by Pres.  Obama presenting himself to voters as a constitutional law scholar, and  now backing these actions. Seaman suggested that the ultimate goal of  such surveillance is to prevent or stifle civil unrest.
Overconfidence
During  the first half-hour, psychiatrist Dr. Peter Breggin reacted to a new  study about overconfidence, which finds that people can draw inaccurate  conclusions when they underestimate what they don't know. Genuine  confidence comes from the ability to think for yourself and solve  problems, Breggin commented.
News segment guest: Will Thomas
This is cool!
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