What do you need and what does it cost to live your live as an augmented human?
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What do you need and what does it cost to live your live as an augmented human?
The influence of software on our life keeps growing. Devices are telling us what to do and how we're doing. But instead of just reading about the risks of incomprehensible AI and machine learning controlling us, it's time to do something about it. Join us in exploring, extending and enhancing this initiative: http://ifthistheni.com It's still very basic, but the fundament is there. Define the rules that define you!
There's a patent war going on. Day by day we're seeing new black and white sketches on our social media timelines revealing inventions for our future world. The general response is often wildly enhusiastic. In the imagination people have the inventions in the hands already, even though the announced products are far from being a consumer product yet and some never make it to being released at all. Companies argue that the mechanism is a requirement to do bussiness, either selling the product or selling the patent. Companies labeled "patent trolls" focus on dealing fictional patents only, never with the intention to release an actual product.
It's a playing field of big bussinesses and it seems to be relevant for those working in the hi-tech world only, but the current stream of patents is different. They apply to us, humans, in a radical new way. Many of the recent patent filing deal with augmented reality and are meant for a future in which we're wearing augmented reality headsets, not viewing AR through a smartphone screen. AR might move on from being "the gimmick" it has been called for a decade, but it is going to impact the way we see the world and interact with objects and other people. Devices like the abandoned Google Glass, the Microsoft Hololens and the upcoming Apple AR product all connect to the cloud to show us annotations on what we're see and instructions on what to do.
But are these devices also going to tell us what not to do? Because the cloud we're connected to doesn't own the right patents or is not willing to pay for them? Human behaviour cannot, but robot behaviour can be patented. What about the semi-digital beings we're slowly becoming with the increasing amount of technical devices we're keeping close to our body? Our smartphones, wearables and smartwatches alerting us when there's an occasion to put on our AR or VR headsets. We are the robot of the future. But what about patents applicable to our semi-digital behaviour, steered by instructions appearing in augmented reality? Perhaps our behaviour will not be blocked, but certain features or instructions could be missing from the interface. I once looked up the reason why I cannot search for an app on the homescreen of my Samsung: a patent by Apple. Losing some features is not what the big companies will worry about, and it's only slightly annoying for us as consumers. But the current series of patents in augmented reality will define the limitations we'll experience during our interactions in the real world.
One sample semi-fictional patent is features in this concept video above of a Hololens app. The aim of developing the prototype is to experience and explore this future scenario in search of preemptive solutions to these preemptive problem descriptions.