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Brain-computer interfaces enable direct access to the human brain for the first time – offering enormous medical potential, but also posing new risks of influence, manipulation, and misuse.
What once sounded like science fiction is becoming a reality: brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) are leaving the lab and evolving into a strategically important technology. They capture brain signals, analyze them digitally, and translate them into technical commands – for example, to control computers or prosthetics using only the power of thought.
Medical applications are still the primary focus. However, as technology advances, a new area of risk is emerging: for the first time, mental states can be technically recorded, analyzed, and potentially influenced. This becomes particularly relevant where BCIs are used beyond the medical field—for example, in everyday work, in digital media, or in the security sector. In such cases, they can not only provide support but also measure attention, collect highly sensitive neural data, serve military purposes, or become a new vulnerability in networked systems—leading to scenarios such as “brain hacking”, “brainjacking”, and forms of targeted influence (“mind control”).
This development is being driven in no small part by influential tech barons such as Elon Musk (Neuralink) and Sam Altman (OpenAI, Merge Labs), who view BCIs as a key technology for the next phase of human-machine interaction. At the same time, this pursuit of “transhumanism” brings new questions regarding control, data power, and societal safeguards into sharp focus.
The Cognitive Briefing by the FERI Cognitive Finance Institute (available in German) analyzes this exciting development and highlights in particular:
The analysis is available in German in the download section on this page.