Posted by
CmdrTaco
on from the practical-uses-for-pets dept.
PhilHibbs sent us an article from wired that talks about Neuroscientists creating
videos from a cats eyes using electrodes implanted in a cats brain.
Here are some
Pictures.
Hope they don't mind me taking a load off their server. Be gentle, now!
This could be trouble....for someone
by
emag
·
· Score: 5
I think every place I've ever worked has had a large stray cat population. Somehow, they always seem to be able to get into the fenced-off areas of the premises. And there's always something requiring one type of clearance or another going on (that's what happens in the defense world....).
Anyway, I'm sure that just about any place w/ enough people has some population of stray animals. Imagine if Boris & Natasha happen to collect up the animals one day, and implant the next generation of these electrodes in the cats, along with transmitters. Suddenly, you've got a large roving population of cameras around places you really don't want pictures taken.
Even if they weren't able to get into any type of restricted area, you'd still likely get several shots of the employees, so you'd know who to target when trying to "turn" someone.
They could even go so far as to train animals from birth to perform certain tasks, such as getting into rooms with doors slightly ajar, knocking over file folders with papers in them and looking at the papers for X seconds, etc. Who would suspect a stray of spying?
Alternately, this could be the ultimate voyeur tool. "Hi, I got you this pet kitten."
-- "The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." --H.L. Mencken
Here ya go.
Hope they don't mind me taking a load off their server. Be gentle, now!
I think every place I've ever worked has had a large stray cat population. Somehow, they always seem to be able to get into the fenced-off areas of the premises. And there's always something requiring one type of clearance or another going on (that's what happens in the defense world....).
Anyway, I'm sure that just about any place w/ enough people has some population of stray animals. Imagine if Boris & Natasha happen to collect up the animals one day, and implant the next generation of these electrodes in the cats, along with transmitters. Suddenly, you've got a large roving population of cameras around places you really don't want pictures taken.
Even if they weren't able to get into any type of restricted area, you'd still likely get several shots of the employees, so you'd know who to target when trying to "turn" someone.
They could even go so far as to train animals from birth to perform certain tasks, such as getting into rooms with doors slightly ajar, knocking over file folders with papers in them and looking at the papers for X seconds, etc. Who would suspect a stray of spying?
Alternately, this could be the ultimate voyeur tool. "Hi, I got you this pet kitten."
"The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." --H.L. Mencken