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Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 07:46
by jee
Ever since humans first invented guns, they've been inventing new uses for them. Some shoot bullets; others shoot lasers. But a strange and unsettling new gun being developed by Japanese researchers shoots sound waves in an effort to disrupt and silence anyone who dares speak out of turn.

The gun operates based on the concept of delayed auditory feedback. An attached microphone picks up the sound being made by the target and plays it back 0.2 seconds later. The effect is incredibly confusing to the human brain, making it all but impossible to talk or hold a conversation. The device doesn't cause the person it's being used on any physical harm — it simply messes with their head.

When the human brain hears its own speech perfectly in sync during normal speech, it easily processes the input and allows you to largely ignore the sound of your own voice. However, by offsetting the response just a bit, the brain hears your mouth speaking as well as the strange echo effect produced by the gun. This unusual combination is confusing enough to effectively shut down the part of your brain responsible for managing speech, and you fall immediately silent.

The first versions of the weapon — if we can even call it that — were dependent on a separate PC to process the input and relay it back to the speaker. However, the second prototype (pictured above) does away with the need for additional hardware and includes all the necessary processing bits within its casing, making it easily portable.

The developers say the gun could be used for seemingly innocuous purposes, such as enforcing rules requiring library patrons to keep quiet. It could also see action during large meetings when it is important that onlookers not disrupt the speaker; anyone who fancies a noisy outburst would immediatley be silenced by the high-tech handheld.

The free speech implications of the speech jammer are somewhat disconcerting: A protestor or speaker at a political rally could be easily silenced just for having unpopular views. Political rallies and other protest gatherings could easily be quieted by the strange gun, should law enforcement or other agencies decide to equip themselves with the technology.
Although, this might be handy in some of the meetings i sit in....

speech jammer

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 07:57
by Hman
I feel the need to use this on Juju.

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 08:17
by CapNemo
:lol: that would be brilliant Hman

jee I think we are a bit late for free speech any way

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 08:25
by Tribble
Free - is an illusion

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 08:56
by jee
You know, free speech is something that I will fight for till the blood flows... that and the right to privacy

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 09:02
by CapNemo
Good idea jee but if you look at the Goverment it might be a bit late RICA and Secrecy act comes to mind

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 09:04
by SykomantiS
So, hearing your own voice out of sync causes an involuntary spasm that shuts you up? :?
I find this a wee bit hard to believe. :|

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 09:07
by Tribble
I experience that on the phone sometimes and it is not impossible to continue talking - it is distracting though and not pleasant

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 09:20
by RuadRauFlessa
@Tribble: The feedback you get on your cell is not the same. The time delay is too big. AFAIK it has to be a fraction of a second

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 10:04
by KALSTER
There is a device that fits in your ear that also replays your own voice back to you. This help people with a stammer to speak normally. Now, what if you tune that thing to play it back to you at a 0.2 second delay? We could implant it into Malema's brain and keep him permanently quiet. :twisted:

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 10:12
by CapNemo
:lol: good planning Kal

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 13:51
by ACiD_Omega
SykomantiS wrote:So, hearing your own voice out of sync causes an involuntary spasm that shuts you up? :?
I find this a wee bit hard to believe. :|
agreed, we often have delayed feedback on our crappy local telephony networks, it's confusing for about half a second and then you choose to ignore it.

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 15:09
by Ron2K
SykomantiS wrote:So, hearing your own voice out of sync causes an involuntary spasm that shuts you up? :?
I find this a wee bit hard to believe. :|
From personal experience -- it works.

If you use Teamspeak for whatever reason, try using the "test my microphone" function. It loops back through your headclamps the microphone input after a short delay (I think between 0.5 and 1.0 seconds or so, not sure on how long). In my case, it quickly reduces me to a blabbering, incoherent mess, which in turn causes me to shut up. :P

It's also an issue for me when my voice gets looped back via other people's speakers and microphone.

That being said, while it's true in my case, other people's mileage may vary.

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 19:43
by KALSTER
SykomantiS wrote:So, hearing your own voice out of sync causes an involuntary spasm that shuts you up? :?
I find this a wee bit hard to believe. :|
Our brains are weirder than you might think. The stammer remedy is one thing. Another is that damage to a certain part of the brain causes you to lose the ability to recognise faces. Your vision is still perfectly fine and your mental capacity otherwise is unaffected, but you are unable to asign a collection of facial features to a person. There are many other examples. This isn't weird enough to be dismissed out of hand. ;)

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012, 19:49
by WiK1d
I want one.

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 03 Mar 2012, 00:27
by senile
KALSTER wrote:Another is that damage to a certain part of the brain causes you to lose the ability to recognise faces. Your vision is still perfectly fine and your mental capacity otherwise is unaffected, but you are unable to asign a collection of facial features to a person.
Is this caused by physical injuries like concussion?

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 05 Mar 2012, 06:10
by RuadRauFlessa
Unfortunately this delayed feedback effect does not work on a forum....

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 05 Mar 2012, 09:10
by KALSTER
senile wrote:
KALSTER wrote:Another is that damage to a certain part of the brain causes you to lose the ability to recognise faces. Your vision is still perfectly fine and your mental capacity otherwise is unaffected, but you are unable to asign a collection of facial features to a person.
Is this caused by physical injuries like concussion?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosopagnosia

As far as I remember it was brain damage to a certain region that did it, but this link says it can be inherited as well. I wouldn't think that simply concussion would be able to do it though, but I could be wrong.

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 05 Mar 2012, 09:53
by senile
KALSTER wrote:
senile wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosopagnosia

As far as I remember it was brain damage to a certain region that did it, but this link says it can be inherited as well. I wouldn't think that simply concussion would be able to do it though, but I could be wrong.
I think I have this... Prosopagnosia. I need to see my psychiatrist again to sort this out.

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 05 Mar 2012, 10:29
by KALSTER
Really? Since birth or as a result of an accident?

Re: Good bye Free Speech?

Posted: 05 Mar 2012, 14:49
by senile
KALSTER wrote:Really? Since birth or as a result of an accident?
Let's call it a mental accident :D