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Corporate Neurotechnology and the Privatization of the Mind




By Marivel Guzman| Akashma News

Appendix F examines the private-sector machinery behind the emerging brain–computer interface economy. While government programs such as DARPA’s Silent Talk and Next-Generation Nonsurgical Neurotechnology programs reveal the military interest in neural systems, companies like Neuralink, Synchron, Meta, Kernel, Emotiv, and other neurotechnology firms represent the commercial side of the same frontier: the conversion of brain signals into data.

The central concern is not merely whether these devices can help people with paralysis, neurological injury, or communication loss. Those therapeutic possibilities are real and important. The deeper question is what happens when neural activity becomes measurable, transferable, patentable, and eventually monetized.

Brain–computer interfaces are being promoted as medical miracles, productivity tools, communication devices, and even future consumer platforms. But once thought-adjacent signals are captured by hardware, processed by artificial intelligence, and stored through corporate infrastructure, the mind enters the same economy that already transformed faces, voices, movements, purchasing habits, emotions, and social relationships into data commodities.

The danger is not science itself. The danger is ownership.

When private companies build the interface between the nervous system and the digital world, they also create new gatekeepers over human agency. A device first approved for medical restoration may later become the foundation for workplace monitoring, behavioral prediction, cognitive profiling, or neuro-advertising. History shows that technologies introduced under humanitarian language often migrate into security, labor, military, and consumer-control systems.

Neuralink’s public narrative centers on restoring movement and communication. Yet its broader ambition points toward human-AI integration. This language should be treated with seriousness. “Integration” is not a neutral word. It implies a future where the biological person and the artificial system are not merely interacting, but becoming operationally connected.

That future raises urgent questions:

Who owns neural data?

Who has access to it?

Can it be subpoenaed, hacked, sold, licensed, or analyzed for behavioral prediction?

Can a user truly consent when the device is necessary for speech, movement, employment, or medical care?

Can a human being unplug without losing social, economic, or physical function?

The privatization of neurotechnology may create a new form of dependency. The user does not simply own a device; the device may become part of the user’s body, identity, communication, and autonomy. Once that occurs, traditional consumer protections are insufficient. A brain interface is not like a phone. It is closer to a nervous-system extension.

Appendix F therefore argues that neural data must be treated as sacred biological information, not as ordinary consumer data. It belongs in the same moral category as DNA, medical records, private speech, and bodily autonomy — but with an even higher level of protection because it may reveal intention, impulse, emotional state, attention, and cognitive vulnerability.

The coming neurotechnology market must not be allowed to repeat the abuses of social media, surveillance capitalism, predictive policing, biometric databases, and behavioral advertising. The mind cannot become the next platform.

If neural sovereignty means anything, it means this:

No corporation should own the gateway to human thought.

No investor class should control the infrastructure of cognition.

No government should access neural data without strict constitutional protection.

No human being should be forced, pressured, or economically coerced into cognitive integration.

The brain is not a market.

The mind is not a device.

Consciousness is not infrastructure.

Appendix F establishes the corporate dimension of the Neural Sovereignty investigation: the moment when the battlefield moves from the body to the data stream, and from public defense research to private empire.