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Brain chips haven’t had their ChatGPT moment yet.
AI, Mind Reading and Microchip Brain Implants
Author: Dan Lohrmann
Back in January of this year, I asked this question: Will 2026 See a ‘ChatGPT Moment’ for Microchip Implants?
The answer so far is no, but there have been quite a few interesting developments in the past six months that have moved that day closer to reality.
Consider these top stories on brain microchip implants:
Business Insider: Neuralink competitor Paradromics just implanted its first brain-chip device. The next step is restoring speech — “Paradromics, a competitor of Elon Musk’s Neuralink, recently completed its first brain implant in a human patient, marking a major milestone in the startup’s decadelong effort to use brain-computer interfaces (BCI) to restore lost human functions.
“The startup announced Wednesday that its Connexus brain chip was implanted in a Michigan woman who has difficulty speaking due to a motor neuron disease. The woman’s identity has not yet been disclosed to protect patient privacy.
“The procedure was part of an FDA-approved clinical study conducted at University of Michigan Health. The operation, which took place in early June, lasted about four hours, a representative for Michigan Medicine, the university’s academic medical center, said.”
Politico: Silicon Valley Wants to Put a Chip in Your Brain — “A battle is looming not just over privacy, but the future of the human species. ‘Someone you work with will get it first. And you’ll hold out for a while, the way you did with the smartphone. But eventually, you won’t,’ said Phoenix, dressed in all black with a tiny mic attached to his ear. ‘The advantages of integration will be hard to compete with.’
“Put bluntly, in his view, ‘We’re on the cusp of the next major transition, the merger of humans and AI.’”
The Detroit Jewish News: Neuralink Patient Shares Breakthrough at Michigan Yeshiva Symposium — “A mesmerized audience watched a chess game being played on a stage at Yeshiva Beth Yehudah. The digital chess board and its pieces were displayed on a large screen behind the two players. Both used computer cursors to move their digital chess pieces. But one individual — Noland Arbaugh, moved the cursor only by thinking with a special brain-computer interface.”
Times of India: China beats Elon Musk to launch world’s first commercial brain chip
WCCFTech: Samsung And Elon Musk Partner Up Again, This Time For The 4th-Generation Neuralink Chip Under The 4nm Process, TSMC Seemingly Dropped — “The development of Elon Musk’s fourth-generation Neuralink chip is already underway as Samsung looks to strengthen the bond between the two. The newest iteration belonging to the neurotechnology company is expected to have unique characteristics thanks to its ability to enable bidirectional communication between the brain and computing devices.”
DWT: Now Hiring: Humans (No Hardware Required) — “On March 11, 2026, Gov. Bob Ferguson signed House Bill 2303 into law. The legislation — sponsored by Seattle Rep. Brianna Thomas — passed the Senate unanimously and with strong bipartisan support in the House. It takes effect June 11, 2026, and answers a question most employers were probably not asking: Can we implant tracking devices in our workforce? Simply put — no. Washington employers may not mandate, coerce or even ask employees to have microchips implanted, and they may face some very real and costly penalties if they do.”
Related media headlines surrounding developments with AI and mind reading include:
BBC: How AI can read our scrambled inner thoughts — “The crackle of electricity inside your brain has long been too complex to decode. Artificial intelligence is changing that.
“The woman didn’t move, apart from the rise and fall of her breathing — eyes fixed in concentration, hand clenched in a fist. Words were forming on a screen in front of her, slowly piecing together into whole sentences. Sentences she couldn’t say out loud.
“The 52-year-old woman had been paralyzed by a stroke 19 years earlier, leaving her unable to speak clearly. Here, however, her internal monologue was appearing before her eyes.
“The woman, identified only as participant T16, had been fitted with a tiny array of electrodes that was surgically inserted into a lobe at the front of her brain. Now a computer, powered by a form of artificial intelligence, was decoding the signals produced by her neurons as she imagined saying words, with the system translating them into text on a screen. She was taking part in a study at Stanford University in California, U.S., alongside three patients with the neurodegenerative disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), to test a technique capable of translating thoughts into real-time text.
“It was the closest scientists had come yet to a form of ‘mind reading.’”
But perhaps the most significant development of all came when the Elon Musk-led SpaceX went public on June 12 with a multitrillion-dollar valuation — making Musk the first trillionaire.
Why is this so important? This article from TechRepublic explains: Inside Elon Musk’s AI Ecosystem: How xAI, Tesla, X, Neuralink, and SpaceX Are Converging
“Neuralink sits at the farthest edge of Musk’s AI map. The company is developing brain-computer interfaces that enable people to control digital devices with neural signals. Its first human clinical studies have focused on helping individuals with paralysis regain independence through direct interaction with computers.
“For now, Neuralink is primarily a medical technology company rather than a conventional AI business. But strategically, it points to a future in which the interface between humans and computers becomes significantly more direct.
“That makes Neuralink relevant to Musk’s broader AI ambitions, even if the timelines are much longer and the regulatory hurdles much higher. Brain-computer interfaces require advanced signal processing, robotics, software, and eventually AI-assisted interpretation of neural activity.
“The caution is just as important as the ambition. Brain implants involve clinical trials, patient safety, medical oversight, and ethical scrutiny. Neuralink may be the most futuristic part of Musk’s AI portfolio, but it is also the one operating under the strictest constraints.”
FINAL THOUGHTS
The rapid rise of connected smart glasses and other wearable devices may be the clearest recent sign of a future in which humans are deeply connected through AI and augmented reality.
And yet, implemented chips are making raid progress for medical reasons, and more people are discussing human-to-machine interfaces.
This blog will continue to cover this topic as advances continue and as more and more states ban the forced implanting of microchips in employees.
Credits: TCA, LLC.