A read-write device asks a different question than a tracker does. What can we do about it right now?
"Wearable-induced health anxiety is anxiety or excessive worry about your health that is triggered or made worse by data." ...
A read-write wearable both reads your body and writes back to it by delivering an intervention.
The technology has some promising applications, but is not ready for whole body cancer screening and will not replace other ...
Police are adopting AI to analyze data and write reports, but experts warn of privacy risks and potential bias.
The move from read-only tracking to closed-loop intervention is not a marketing tweak. It changes what a wearable is for.
We tested and compared InBody vs. Withings in terms of price, metrics, build, and usability. Read on and learn which one is ...
As law enforcement agencies increasingly embrace AI, some civil liberties advocates, legal scholars and policing experts warn ...
Consumer wearables are evolving from passive stress monitors into read-write systems.
"Biofeedback helps you make slight changes in your body, such as relaxing muscles, to help relieve pain or reduce tension." ...
Proposed law would let police use "biometric analysis" to categorize people and identify or locate individuals using ...
A handful of start-up firms are testing therapies that target specific epigenetic markers to treat everything from high ...