Lawrence Krauss Kevin Mitnik Elon Musk Sebastian Thrun Lusianna Walkowicz
The film is divided into ten segments that
start with “The Early Days” (and we get to see the first computer that was used
in developing the Internet) and ends up with “The Future”, in which the brain
will be capable of remote sensing and transmitting information through
non-physical channels to points outside itself). In-between, we hear about the glories of the internet, the
dark side of it, life without the internet, the possible end of it, hacking as
an advanced threat, people as being the source of threats to security, the
extension of the internet to outer space, artificial intelligence, and the
interface of humans with their computers and the internet.
Problems or possible problems are brought to
our attention, such as internet addictions, hypersensitivity to radio waves and
our electronic devices creating an illness, sun flares that are potentially
disastrous, how humans would have a hard time existing without the internet
(say, if sun flares wiped it out), and cyber warfare.
Ways that technology is altering humanity is
shown, i.e., already, physical and digital life may be blurred, and currently,
students are often not encouraged to do deep critical thinking. If machines eventually are able to do
most jobs, and individual preferences are instantly gratified (sounds,
lighting, temperature) whenever we enter a room, for instance, who will we be? Of course, the ultimate question is,
“What makes humans human?”
A provocative film for contemporary
times in the age of the computer and the Internet.
Grade: A By Donna
R. Copeland
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