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Implanted digital immortality

The development of information technology will make digital immortality available to all. This can be achieved through implanting neuro-nanorobots into the brain. Despite having similar properties to ordinary cells, they differ from their living cousins in a number of important ways: they are programmed to interact with a computer; they are immortal; they can draw energy both from the organism and an external source, etc. This type of nanorobot scans information about a cell, writes it to itself, and then replaces the cell. Initially, it is implanted into the blood, whereupon it proceeds to extract vital matter from the biowaste of the body’s organs and build its own copy. The process of replacing the brain takes place over an extended period, and painlessly for the patient, who can continue their daily activity during and after the process. In addition, the patient can load firmware to augment reality or enhance their personality, and after the body’s natural death the brain sends a signal that it needs to be extracted and connected to a special computer. Thus, the person attains digital immortality. This brain will be the center and processor of the data array, and, curiously, will retain its own consciousness.

I agree
90
I don't agree
35
Sophia Want to be immortal? Act! https://bilimyurt.com/
11 Feb 2021
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SWASTIK SUMAN SAHOO if this is possible then can it be planted on someone's else mind and regain the information??
06 Feb 2021
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Robi St.Antoine Despite whatever beliefs you might have, no one actually knows what happens after physical death; near-death experiences are just that - "near death". But the idea of mapping one's personality and having a virtual construct that persists in the cloud seems like a viable possibility, even a likelihood at some point. But while that construct would appear for all intents and purposes just like the person mapped, whether it would have self-awareness or not is hard to say. We are a looong way from the zeroes and ones of binary code achieving the same resolution as the physical world equivalent of existence and non-existence.
30 Jun 2020
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Darko Dimitrijevic Normally, there is no such a think among the humans like immortality. Remember that. A man in the hospital with a pump instead of his own heart died from an unknown cause...his soul was gone away from "unknown reasons".
08 Nov 2019
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Henrique B. Martins I think metaphysics and after life is real, so i don't like this idea, but even if it would be possible, i think only by 2070 or even 2100
01 Nov 2019
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Gaet Bout Il faudrait déjà comprendre le fonctionnement du cerveau dans sa globalité. e ne suis pas sûr qu'une copie
28 Sep 2019
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Jonathan Jason Best Gagné I believe full blown immortality could eventually happen with nano bots however I think that major revolutions in life extension and rejuvenation by 2050 will be done by fixing the causes of aging with compounds, stem cells and gene or epigenetic editing. I strongly believe that nano technology will have a role in this from now and 2050, by assisting the aforementioned mediums. I don't think we will reach full peak immortality in 2050 but it doesn't matter. I'm 37 at this time but I speculate that there are very good odds that I will be a full blown immortal in my lifetime, just not by then (2050). However, in my opinion, by 2050 I'm sure someone that will be my age will easily be able to look like we do now (20s&30s) with a life expectancy easily from 100 to 200 years old. Not only will we live that long but we will in a youthful and healthy body and mind. I think after another 50 to 100 years after this revolution, true immortality is very possible and the merging of technology and humans seems very likely.
13 Mar 2019
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Daryl Johnson If, curiously, the nanorobot brain was doing a flawless impression of the original human brain, could we tell the difference?
26 Feb 2019
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