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It's amazing how Gilbert et al. and the journ*lists fricked up this story. The device would not work without ongoing maintenance in the form of new batteries (the device had a 3-year battery life and use proprietary batteries), replacing worn out components, and updating the model (probably some RNN or LSTM) used to predict the onset of seizures. Eventually, it was going to be just a hunk of metal that would've been a vector for infections and would have to be removed for her safety.

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The point here is that planned obsolescence for brain implants is a bad thing. There needed to be a plan in place and maybe information held in escrow.

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It wasn't planned obsolescence, which is where a company intentionally causes a device to fail prematurely. They just didn't have a plan to maintain the product if the company went out of business. And honestly, even if the implant was completely open source, I'm not sure how you would maintain it since they need to update the model, which requires you to have ongoing data collection and a data scientist familiar with the initial model to update it.

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I want the option if its in my brain. I'll fricking figure it out.

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I'll fricking figure it out.

I'm sure you would've survived the Titan sub implosion too.

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It's my brain on the line my life. I would want the opportunity to figure it out

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Couldn't they have just open sourced the battery and had a secondary market of nonofficial but functional batteries for the implant.

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There probably isn't anything to open source. It's just a LiPo battery in a particular shape. The issue is there is no secondary market when there are like 20 people with this device in the trial.

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>planned obsolescence

I knew you were r-slurred.

>they should've made the batteries last 10 years and cost five times more!!!!

:soyjaktantrum:

Dur needs to be plan in place and maybe information held in escrow.

:marseyretard4:

There needs to be a plan in place! :marseyxd: Help help, without a plan, no one can do a thing!

I'm sure they talked about it, or it was at least in her contract, but she can't read, so it's her fault.

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