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Hacking the brain: brain–computer interfacing technology and the ethics of neurosecurity
by
Haselager, Pim
, Ienca, Marcello
in
Adaptive technology
/ Brain
/ Brain activity
/ Brain research
/ Cognition
/ Computation
/ Computer Science
/ Computers
/ Control
/ Crime
/ Cybercrime
/ Cybersecurity
/ Devices
/ Disruptive innovation
/ Ethics
/ Hackers
/ Hacking
/ Human-computer interaction
/ Information technology
/ Information warfare
/ Innovation/Technology Management
/ Interactive computer systems
/ Interfaces
/ Library Science
/ Management of Computing and Information Systems
/ Manipulation
/ Medical equipment
/ Original Paper
/ Patients
/ Personal computers
/ Privacy
/ Reflection
/ Regulation
/ Risk
/ Safeguards
/ Self determination
/ Studies
/ Technology
/ User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction
2016
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Hacking the brain: brain–computer interfacing technology and the ethics of neurosecurity
by
Haselager, Pim
, Ienca, Marcello
in
Adaptive technology
/ Brain
/ Brain activity
/ Brain research
/ Cognition
/ Computation
/ Computer Science
/ Computers
/ Control
/ Crime
/ Cybercrime
/ Cybersecurity
/ Devices
/ Disruptive innovation
/ Ethics
/ Hackers
/ Hacking
/ Human-computer interaction
/ Information technology
/ Information warfare
/ Innovation/Technology Management
/ Interactive computer systems
/ Interfaces
/ Library Science
/ Management of Computing and Information Systems
/ Manipulation
/ Medical equipment
/ Original Paper
/ Patients
/ Personal computers
/ Privacy
/ Reflection
/ Regulation
/ Risk
/ Safeguards
/ Self determination
/ Studies
/ Technology
/ User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction
2016
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Do you wish to request the book?
Hacking the brain: brain–computer interfacing technology and the ethics of neurosecurity
by
Haselager, Pim
, Ienca, Marcello
in
Adaptive technology
/ Brain
/ Brain activity
/ Brain research
/ Cognition
/ Computation
/ Computer Science
/ Computers
/ Control
/ Crime
/ Cybercrime
/ Cybersecurity
/ Devices
/ Disruptive innovation
/ Ethics
/ Hackers
/ Hacking
/ Human-computer interaction
/ Information technology
/ Information warfare
/ Innovation/Technology Management
/ Interactive computer systems
/ Interfaces
/ Library Science
/ Management of Computing and Information Systems
/ Manipulation
/ Medical equipment
/ Original Paper
/ Patients
/ Personal computers
/ Privacy
/ Reflection
/ Regulation
/ Risk
/ Safeguards
/ Self determination
/ Studies
/ Technology
/ User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction
2016
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Hacking the brain: brain–computer interfacing technology and the ethics of neurosecurity
Journal Article
Hacking the brain: brain–computer interfacing technology and the ethics of neurosecurity
2016
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Overview
Brain–computer interfacing technologies are used as assistive technologies for patients as well as healthy subjects to control devices solely by brain activity. Yet the risks associated with the misuse of these technologies remain largely unexplored. Recent findings have shown that BCIs are potentially vulnerable to cybercriminality. This opens the prospect of “neurocrime”: extending the range of computer-crime to neural devices. This paper explores a type of neurocrime that we call
brain
-
hacking
as it aims at the illicit access to and manipulation of neural information and computation. As neural computation underlies cognition, behavior and our self-determination as persons, a careful analysis of the emerging risks of malicious brain-hacking is paramount, and ethical safeguards against these risks should be considered early in design and regulation. This contribution is aimed at raising awareness of the emerging risk of malicious brain-hacking and takes a first step in developing an ethical and legal reflection on those risks.
Publisher
Springer Netherlands,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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