reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The future masters of the planet will be determined by those who control the data. Data is crucial because it allows us to hack not only computers, but also human beings and other organisms. To hack a human, you need computing power and biometric data. The control of data could empower elites to not only create digital dictatorships, but also reengineer the future of life itself. Science is replacing evolution by natural selection with evolution by intelligent design, driven by companies like IBM and Microsoft. Additionally, science may enable life to expand beyond organic compounds into the inorganic realm. However, this development may have negative consequences for our species.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID-19 is driving the push for biometric surveillance, going beyond just monitoring our movements and activities. Governments and corporations now want to know what's happening inside our bodies, like our body temperature and medical conditions. This shift towards under-the-skin surveillance is happening even in democratic countries that previously rejected mass surveillance. It's like humans are gaining god-like powers, being able to manipulate and control life itself. We are becoming hackable animals, challenging the notion of free will and the privacy of our thoughts and choices.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The government doesn't get to augment citizens without consent, but plans to induce a novel virus to control people, combined with weather warfare. The new bioeconomy will force augmentation for jobs and city living, similar to how people were coerced into getting COVID shots. Wireless updates cause new diseases due to frequency and cellular voltage. Those prioritizing paychecks over humanity's survival are enabling this. Taking a firm stance against unwanted cyborgization or DNA insertion is met with resistance from those who embraced bio-cyber interfaces. Eugenicists aim to tether humans to the cloud under military control. The Department of Defense is selling people's bodies to vendors as the new healthcare, enabling remote control. The only way to overcome this is through open communication and resistance.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID is crucial for justifying biometric surveillance to monitor body temperature and emotions like anger. This technology allows leaders to gauge public sentiment in real-time, surpassing Stalin's surveillance capabilities. With AI analyzing data, totalitarian regimes could monitor populations constantly without human intervention. COVID legitimizes these invasive measures even in democratic nations.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Tyrants and governments have always wanted to hack people, but lacked the knowledge, computing power, and data to do so. However, corporations and governments are now on the verge of being able to systematically hack all individuals. This means that we, as humans, are no longer mysterious beings, but rather hackable entities. This newfound ability could enable human elites to go beyond digital dictatorships and actually reengineer the future of life itself by hacking organisms.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Humans no longer have free will due to technology's ability to hack us on a large scale. The coronavirus crisis is a chance to implement reforms that wouldn't be accepted in normal times. Vaccines help manage the situation, but surveillance is increasing, potentially leading to a new era of under-the-skin surveillance and bioengineering. This could shift life from natural selection to intelligent design, ushering in an era of inorganic life created by AI and biotechnology.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Historian Yuval Horadi envisions a future where brain computer interfaces and biometric sensors connect all humans to a network. Being disconnected from this network would be detrimental to survival as our bodies and immune systems would rely on constant connection. The powers of biotechnology and artificial intelligence will transform humans into gods, allowing us to create and design life. However, not everyone will have access to these upgrades or control over the algorithms that govern society. This will result in an extremely unequal society, with a small elite of upgraded humans or those who own the master algorithms holding economic and political power.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID is crucial for normalizing biometric surveillance to monitor body temperature and emotions. This technology allows leaders to gauge public sentiment in real-time, unlike Stalin's era. With AI analyzing data, future regimes could have unprecedented control over populations. COVID legitimizes these surveillance measures even in democratic nations.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Corporations and governments can now systematically hack individuals, transforming humans into "hackable animals." Evolution is shifting from natural selection to intelligent design driven by technology, particularly cloud computing. This raises questions about ownership of personal data—whether it belongs to individuals, corporations, or the collective. The notion of free will is challenged as technology enables mass monitoring and manipulation. In times of crisis, opportunities arise for implementing reforms that may not be accepted in normal circumstances. The COVID-19 pandemic may mark the beginning of a new era of surveillance, especially through biometric data collection, which could lead to unprecedented totalitarianism. This capability to understand individuals better than they understand themselves is seen as a significant development of the 21st century.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
To collaborate on a large scale, you need to convince everybody to believe in the same story. The engine of history is stories, and they don't even need to be true; some of the most powerful stories in history were fictions. You need to get everybody, or at least a significant part of the population, to believe in the same story, otherwise it doesn’t work. Science, as a historian notes, is not really about truth. It’s about power. The real aim of science as a project and as an institution is power, even if particular individuals within science may be very interested in the truth personally. Those who own the data really own the future. We are reaching a point in human history where we have enough biological knowledge and enough computing power. All you need in order to systematically hack millions of people is just the data. To hack people means to know people better than they know themselves. Somebody in San Francisco, in Beijing, can know you more than you know about yourself—your medical condition, your mental weaknesses, things you did five years ago, twenty years ago you completely forgot about. They know it. This is something we never faced before; not even the KGB could do it. And we are already beginning to see the emergence of such total surveillance regimes in places like Xinjiang, in places like in Israel, which has a big laboratory of surveillance called the occupied territories. There you have 2,500,000 guinea pigs of how to completely survey and control a population with very few soldiers. When you look at the numbers, it’s amazing how few soldiers you need to control millions of people if you have the data.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Living in the 21st century means humans are now hackable animals. This refers to understanding humans better than they understand themselves, which was never possible before. While it can be beneficial, it becomes problematic when corporations or governments know individuals better than they know themselves. Homo sapiens now have technologies that can either destroy or upgrade us, with authority shifting to algorithms that decide almost everything in our lives. To protect ourselves, we must understand ourselves better. In the future, total surveillance systems could track not just our movements, but also our emotions. Engaging in an arms race with AI, genetics, and biotechnology is dangerous, as it will lead to the worst outcome for humanity. The power to create heaven or hell lies in the hands of politicians and engineers, with philosophers struggling to keep up.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Stories, even if fictional, are the engine of history because they enable large-scale collaboration. Science, as an institution, is not about truth but about power. Those who own the data own the future. We are reaching a point where biological knowledge and computing power enable the systematic hacking of millions of people. To hack people means to know them better than they know themselves. Total surveillance regimes are emerging, such as in Xinjiang and the occupied territories. It's amazing how few soldiers are needed to control millions of people if you have the data.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker explains that hacking millions of people only requires access to their data, allowing others to know individuals better than they know themselves. This poses a threat to democracy and free markets, as it enables manipulation and prediction of people's actions. Total surveillance regimes, like those seen in Xinjiang and the occupied territories of Israel, are emerging, where a small number of soldiers can control millions of people with the help of data.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID legitimizes total biometric surveillance, monitoring not just people, but what's happening under their skin, including body temperature. The same technology can determine what you think about the government because anger is a biological phenomenon. With this surveillance, a television could monitor your reaction to a leader's speech, analyzing biological cues to determine if you're angry, frightened, or bored. Even those watching now could be watched and analyzed. Stalin didn't have this power; he couldn't know what people really thought, even with the KGB. Future Stalins of the 21st century could watch the minds and brains of the entire population and have the computing power to analyze it all.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
All animals and humans have been implanted with Graphene Biochips for control and contact tracing. This includes connection to the Internet of humans and animals. The goal is to have complete control over the body and spirit. Despite the heavy topic, there is still hope to be found.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In the future, the owners of data will determine the appearance of the next generation of humans, as they will have the ability to engineer bodies, brains, and minds. Data is crucial because it allows us to hack not only computers but also human beings and other organisms. With sufficient computing power and biometric data, elites could potentially reengineer life itself. Science is replacing natural selection with intelligent design, driven by advancements in technology such as cloud computing. Humans are now hackable animals, and the concept of free will is diminishing as we can be digitally manipulated on a large scale. The current pandemic has accelerated the implementation of surveillance and the ability to collect and analyze biometric data, which may be the most significant development of the 21st century. This shift towards hacking organisms grants elites the power to engineer the future of life and even create new lifeforms. We are entering an era of inorganic life shaped by intelligent design.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 argues that the current best guess for why we need humans is to “keep them happy with drugs and computer games,” while the idea of the social credit system is to “monetize everything, to give value to every single thing you do in life.” He says it has positive potential in some regards, such as most people being willing to give up privacy in exchange for much better health care based on twenty four hours monitoring of what’s happening inside their bodies. He asserts this is “the end of human history,” not the end of history, but “the end of human dominated history,” with history continuing under somebody else’s control. He claims AI can even “write a new bible,” noting that all the art books of the other religions were written by humans, but “our book” did not come from humans; “No. No. It came from some superhuman intelligence.” He states, “Human rights are just like heaven and like God. It’s just a fictional story.” He predicts that companies like Apple and Google will have “tons and tons of data” on your body and your most private affairs and conditions, and that “We humans should get used to the idea that we are no longer mysterious souls. We are now hackable animals.” By hacking organisms, elites may gain the power to reengineer the future of life itself. He contends that in order to collaborate on a large scale, you need to “convince everybody to believe in the same story.” He concludes with the claim that “The engine of history is stories, and they don’t even need to be true.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID-19 is driving the push for biometric surveillance, going beyond monitoring people's movements to monitoring what's happening under their skin. Governments and corporations are collecting data on our whereabouts, social interactions, and even our medical conditions. Mass surveillance systems are being implemented in democratic countries, with a shift towards surveillance beneath the skin. Microchips are being used as keys, IDs, and wallets, providing instant access to a person's vaccination status. This advancement in technology gives humans unprecedented powers, allowing us to manipulate and control life itself. The concept of free will and individual choice is being challenged as humans become hackable animals.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Contrary to conspiracy theories, implanting chips in people's brains isn't necessary to control or manipulate them. Throughout history, language and storytelling have been used by prophets, poets, and politicians to shape society. Now, AI has the potential to do the same. It has hacked into the operating system of human civilization, possibly marking the end of human dominance in history.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The video discusses the merging of infotech and biotech revolutions, which enables the hacking of human beings. To hack a human, two things are needed: computing power and biometric data. Biometric sensors play a crucial role in translating biochemical processes into electronic signals for analysis. The video mentions DARPA's contracts on electronic telepathy, monitoring brain activity remotely, and transmitting messages to another person's brain. Data is emphasized as the most valuable asset, with those who control it having control over the future of humanity and life itself. The next phase of surveillance is predicted to involve collecting data from within our bodies.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In the future, the masters of the planet will be decided by those who own the data. Data is important because it allows us to hack human beings and other organisms. With computing power and biometric data, elites can reengineer life itself. Science is replacing natural selection with intelligent design, driven by technology companies like IBM and Microsoft. Humans are now hackable animals, and free will is no longer a factor. The coronavirus crisis has led to increased surveillance, allowing for the collection and analysis of biometric data to understand people better than they understand themselves. This ability to hack organisms will give elites the power to engineer the future of life and create new lifeforms. We are entering a new era of inorganic life shaped by intelligent design.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID is crucial for justifying biometric surveillance. Monitoring body temperature can now detect coronavirus, but it could also track emotions like anger towards the government. This surveillance surpasses Stalin's control by analyzing biological cues to know people's thoughts constantly. Unlike Stalin's agents writing reports, AI can instantly analyze data, creating unprecedented control. COVID legitimizes these invasive measures even in democratic nations.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The video discusses the merging of infotech and biotech revolutions, which allows for the hacking of human beings. To hack a human, two things are needed: computing power and biometric data. Biometric sensors are crucial in translating biochemical processes into electronic signals for analysis. The video also mentions DARPA's contracts on electronic telepathy, monitoring brain activity remotely and transmitting messages to another person's brain. Data is emphasized as the most valuable asset, with those controlling it having control over the future of humanity and life itself. The next phase of surveillance is predicted to involve collecting data from within our bodies.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID-19 is driving the acceptance of biometric surveillance, going beyond monitoring our actions to monitoring what's happening inside our bodies. Governments and corporations are collecting data on our movements and preferences, but now they want to know our body temperature, blood pressure, and medical condition. Microchips implanted in our hands serve as keys, IDs, and wallets, allowing instant access to our vaccination status. This shift towards under-the-skin surveillance is happening even in democratic countries that previously rejected mass surveillance. As humans gain more power, we are becoming like gods, with the ability to create and destroy. The idea of humans having a soul or free will is being challenged, as we become hackable animals.

Unlimited Hangout

Dump Davos #1: Data Colonialism & Hackable Humans
Guests: Johnny Vedmore, Yuval Noah Harari
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Whitney Webb and Johnny Vedmore introduce the first episode of Dump Devos, focusing on a special Davos 2020 presentation by Yuval Noah Harari. Vedmore frames Harari as a prominent, polished voice whose audience is the World Economic Forum’s elite; Webb notes Harari’s influence among Obama, Zuckerberg, and other power brokers, and that the core audience for the speech is “the people at Davos, the leaders assembled there.” The session is introduced by Aretha Gadish (Aretha Gadish in transcript), chair of Bain & Company, who cites Martin Rees’s warning about existential threats and opens with Harari and Marc Rutte, the Netherlands’ prime minister, as participants. Harari’s core message centers on three existential challenges, with a focus on the third: “the power to hack human beings” and the threat of “digital dictatorships.” He states, “The three existential challenges are nuclear war, ecological collapse and technological disruption,” and he emphasizes that technology might disrupt human society and the very meaning of human life, ranging from a global useless class to the rise of data colonialism and of digital dictatorships. He presents a defining equation: “B times C times D equals R,” meaning biological knowledge multiplied by computing power multiplied by data equals the ability to hack humans. He asserts, “We are hackable animals.” He cautions that the AI revolution could produce “unprecedented inequality not just between classes but also between countries.” Harari warns that automation will soon eliminate “millions upon millions of jobs,” insisting the struggle will be “against irrelevance,” not merely exploitation. He notes that a 50-year-old truck driver who loses work to a self-driving vehicle would need to reinvent himself as a software engineer or yoga teacher, and emphasizes this as evidence that “the struggle will be against irrelevance.” He adds that “The worse to be irrelevant than to be exploited” is a line Webb highlights as a hinge toward a future of “useless” versus “exploited” classes, with the latter defined by an economic-political system that is increasingly automated and data-driven. Harari expands on “the useless class” and “data colonialism,” arguing the AI revolution will create wealth in a few high-tech hubs while others become “data colonies.” Webb notes that data colonialism is already advancing in the COVID era, with biometric IDs and digital wallets piloted in developing countries, creating a tech infrastructure deployed first where it can most easily be tested. Harari reframes this as a global risk to political sovereignty, warning that “once you have enough data, you don’t need to send soldiers” to control a country. He then outlines a future in which AI-powered systems and predictive algorithms govern many decisions, including work, loans, and even personal relationships. He asserts, “In the coming decades, AI and biotechnology will give us godlike abilities to re engineer life,” but cautions these powers could produce “a race of humans who are very intelligent, but lack compassion, lack autistic sensitivity, and lack spiritual depth.” He states that “the higher you are in the hierarchy, the more closely you will be watched,” and describes a scenario in which “biometric bracelets” monitor people’s physiological states, with the elite secure and insulated, while the mass is surveilled and controlled. Harari’s proposed remedy is global cooperation: “This is not a prophecy. These are just possibilities. Technology is never deterministic. In the twentieth century, people used industrial technology to build very different kinds of societies… The same thing will happen in the twenty first century.” He insists that “global cooperation” is necessary to regulate AI, biotech, and ecological threats, warning that without it, the world risks collapse and a return to a new jungle. He argues a national solution alone is insufficient: “no nation can regulate AI and bioengineering by itself,” and that “the loser will be humanity.” The panel ends with Harari’s metaphor: the global order is now “like a house that everybody inhabits and nobody repairs.” He warns that if the system collapses, “we will find ourselves back in the jungle of omnipresent war,” with the rats potentially rebuilding civilization if leaders fail. Gadish’s postscript adds a blunt acknowledgment of the stakes and the need to avoid “the rats” prevailing, underscoring the elite’s imminent responsibility to shape a planned global framework rather than risk a chaotic resurgence of old power struggles.
View Full Interactive Feed