Imagine if our performance data collection was no longer limited to keyboard and mouse operation logs, but could directly capture brain activity signals? This idea sounds a bit crazy, but at the recent Tech Summit, a company focused on brain-computer interfaces proposed such a bold concept. Their core idea is clear—using neural interface technology to track users' cognitive states and thought activity patterns in real time. This could have a profound impact on Web3 applications, game experience optimization, and even work efficiency assessment. Traditional performance monitoring is long overdue for an upgrade.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
24 Likes
Reward
24
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
0xOverleveraged
· 20h ago
Brain-computer interface data reading? Sounds like science fiction, but if it could directly scan the thoughts in your mind, could rug pulls on the chain still be hidden? Haha
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseHobo
· 01-09 15:56
Brain-computer interface tracking thoughts? Sounds like sci-fi, but this thing is really coming, privacy alert, bro.
View OriginalReply0
UnluckyValidator
· 01-07 18:49
Brain-computer interfaces sound cool, but who dares to use them when they go live? What about privacy...
View OriginalReply0
AirdropJunkie
· 01-07 18:45
Brain-computer interface tracking thoughts? If this really becomes a reality, will there still be privacy, buddy... But speaking of Web3, it's actually suitable for this—decentralization + brainwave data = new possibilities? That's pretty cool.
View OriginalReply0
FortuneTeller42
· 01-07 18:43
Brain-computer interface tracking thoughts? Sounds pretty scary, but optimizing Web3 user experience is indeed a new approach... What about privacy?
View OriginalReply0
TestnetNomad
· 01-07 18:41
Brain-computer interfaces are really here... It feels a bit invasive, directly reading minds—do we still have privacy?
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingerGas
· 01-07 18:37
Brain-computer interaction capturing cognitive data? Sounds like a new dimension of game theory equilibrium, but what about on-chain evidence... How can this thing be verified to prevent abuse?
View OriginalReply0
StableGenius
· 01-07 18:31
nah, brain signals for perf metrics? empirically speaking, that's just surveillance capitalism wearing a neuralink mask. let me explain why this gets messy fast—you're literally monetizing cognition at that point. web3 devs will absolutely abuse this data, mark my words.
Imagine if our performance data collection was no longer limited to keyboard and mouse operation logs, but could directly capture brain activity signals? This idea sounds a bit crazy, but at the recent Tech Summit, a company focused on brain-computer interfaces proposed such a bold concept. Their core idea is clear—using neural interface technology to track users' cognitive states and thought activity patterns in real time. This could have a profound impact on Web3 applications, game experience optimization, and even work efficiency assessment. Traditional performance monitoring is long overdue for an upgrade.