DragonflEye Project Wants To Turn Insects Into Cyborg Drones 78
New submitter robotopia writes: Scientists at a research and development company called Draper are using genetic engineering and optoelectronics to turn dragonflies into cybernetic insects, reports IEEE Spectrum. To control the dragonflies, Draper engineers are genetically modifying the nervous system of the insects so they can respond to pulses of light. The goal of the project, called DragonflEye, is enabling insects to carry scientific payloads or conduct surveillance.
Killer insects (Score:2)
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Actually there was a Get Smart episode about this. CONTROL had spend millions developing the spy fly and were demo'ing it when MAX walks in the room and swats it
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TV Series or Movie? I don't know about the series, but in the movie, it is Agent 23 (played by The Rock) who snatches the fly out of the air and tosses it into a trashcan.
Get Smart - Agent 23 [youtube.com]
The crash into a building bit at the end is not part of the movie, obviously.
Not at all creepy (Score:5, Insightful)
This is not at all creepy. It's not remotely creepy. It is in no way awfully, shockingly, horrifyingly creepy; and there's no way this can be abused or go wrong.
Nope.
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One day they'll malfunction and start digging into people's brains.
That won't be a malfunction.
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"Scientific payloads" . . . or nano-size nuclear weapon payloads . . . Edward Teller and Johnny von Neumann would have loved this . . .
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Re:Not at all creepy (Score:5, Funny)
That's because they're nano sized. Duh.
Re: Not at all creepy (Score:3)
The future's going to be... interesting.
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I assume that was a joke but cesium-based weaponry offers yields several orders of magnitude greater than chemical explosives (though less than conventional fission warheads) and is well-suited for microminiaturization.
The future's going to be... interesting.
If you weren't on some government "watch list" before, well, you probably are now!
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2000 or so insects, each carrying a gram of plutonium, flying into a compact mass at a designated point...
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"Scientific payloads" . . . or nano-size nuclear weapon payloads . . . Edward Teller and Johnny von Neumann would have loved this . . .
Of course, it's going to be a problem to get enough mass into an insect to detonate fissionable material.
Maybe we can clone some of those carboniferous age insects. Those bastards were huge!
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I saw a fossil of a half-meter long dragonfly when I was a little kid, and the first thing that came to my mind was I WANT!!!
"Alexa, send the giant dragonfly to bring me a beer."
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I saw a fossil of a half-meter long dragonfly when I was a little kid, and the first thing that came to my mind was I WANT!!!
"Alexa, send the giant dragonfly to bring me a beer."
Humans would have found it very interesting among the humongous bugs back in the day.
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Still, you're correct. This can go horribly wrong. A weaponized swarm of bees. Wonderful. Didn't Minority Report has something similar to that?
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A weaponized swarm of bees. Wonderful. Didn't Minority Report has something similar to that?
Not sure, but Black Mirror [wikipedia.org] did.
All life will become a target (Score:5, Interesting)
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Yeah, because the US military is so scared of the EPA.
Junk Science (Score:1)
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This is obviously a ploy for funding. This is junk science at it's peak.
Not necessarily so. There have been remote control cockroaches for several years now.
Re: Junk Science (Score:3, Funny)
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No, Congress is an example of cockroaches remote controlling humans.
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"This is junk science at it's peak."
And that was junk grammar at its peak.
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In spite of half a century of work on robotics there is still nothing as flexible, adaptable and efficient as living creatures. Ma Nature has had four billion years to get it right, so a dragonfly can zoom around all day refueling in mid-flight while a robotic imitation needs a tether or a battery that runs down in a couple of minutes.
Here's a practical application; want to check for gypsy moth caterpillar damage in the upper canopy of the closest forest? You could climb up a couple dozen trees, or send t
That's different (Score:2)
Draper engineers are genetically modifying the nervous system of the insects so they can respond to pulses of light.
Or is it not much of a stretch? [youtube.com]
Cool stuff! (Score:5, Funny)
Wait till Musk gets a wind of this. We will have the Lexx before 2020!
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Can we get Zev first?
Let me get this straight... (Score:2, Funny)
Scientists are working out a way to make bugs that are... bugs?
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They need to debug bugs in bug bugs first.
Does it scale? (Score:1)
I await the day this can be scaled to humans. Humans would be much more tolerable if their minds were all controlled by pulses of light... or is that what we call television?
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I'm not sure about that. Trump is being controlled by Putin via a device on his head that looks convincingly like hair. He's not very tolerable.
very late (Score:1)
Remember Iran taking the cyber-squirrels, upgraded version of "Acoustic kitty" from the 60's. Do you really think we stopped that when squirrels are a bigger threat to our infrastructure than hackers? (https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/17/01/21/039256/are-squirrels-a-bigger-threat-to-our-critical-infrastructure)
Birds and insects have been on a "wishlist" for a very long time. There are darpa grants to indicate this. In our current hyper-surveillance age, you don't think the massively funded military in
Soon (Score:5, Insightful)
Soon the secret service will shoot down every pidgin, every fly entering the air space of the white house. Drones are banned already.
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I hope not, pidgin has helped people from different cultures communicate for centuries.
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Soon the secret service will shoot down every pidgin, every fly entering the air space of the white house. Drones are banned already.
I see you are speaking pigeon English - very clever!
If I had a dollar.. (Score:1)
Respond to pulses of light? (Score:1)
I love where this is going.
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If they can really do this, (Score:2)
then where's my flying car?
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When people stop crashing cars into things while drunk.
In 3D this problem would be significantly worse.
someone is rather out of touch (Score:2)
Draper Labs has been around for nearly a century; it's a nonprofit R&D institution that does defense-related research, often classified. Referring to it as "a company called Draper" means the poster hasn't done their homework. And they aren't using "optoelectronics", they are using "optogenetics".
This project is an academic research project, like literally thousands of others at universities and non-profits funded by the US government. This is no Weyland-Yutani or Tyrell corporation.
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Yes, "The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc" is a non-profit that spun out of a little school called MIT in the 1970s. (Not to be confused with "Lincoln Laboratory" which is still officially MIT-run, or "MITRE Corporation" which was created in the late 1950s with mostly former MIT/Lincoln folks.)
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1974 - Danny Dunn (Score:1)
We've been here before - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Dunn,_Invisible_Boy
Happy goldfish bowl to you, to me, to everyone (Score:5, Interesting)
The voyeurs are going to have a field day with this. You'll never know anymore if your bedroom, your shower stall, the inside of your car as you drive to work, your work office are truly private. Even if you lined a room with metal to create a faraday cage, an insect could be programmed to enter, loiter while a camera records for a few hours, then exit so it can upload the recorded video. You thought companies tracking your web browsing habits with cookies was invasive? You ain't seen nothing yet.
hash (Score:1)
#surveillanceculture
WCPGW (Score:2)
http://ferdyonfilms.com/Lexx%2... [ferdyonfilms.com]
Danny Dunn (Score:2)
Not quite exactly the same, but kind of...
One of my favorite Danny Dunn [wikipedia.org] stories as a kid..
They already created dragonfly drones 10 years ago (Score:1)
next: sharks with frickin' lasers _in_ their heads (Score:2)