Elon Musk’s Neuralink Gets $27 Million to Build Brain Computers
Elon Musk’s Neuralink Gets $27 Million to Build Brain
Computers
San Francisco-based company hiring engineers and
scientists
Brain-machine interface hopes to connect humans with
computers
By Dana Hull August 25, 2017, 12:47 PM PDT
Neuralink Corp., the startup co-founded by billionaire
Elon Musk, has taken steps to sell as much as $100 million in stock to fund the
development of technology that connects human brains with computers.
The San Francisco-based company has already gotten $27
million in funding, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission. Musk said via Twitter on Friday that Neuralink isn’t seeking
outside investors. A spokesman didn’t respond to questions about the source of
the funds.
Musk, 46, is the chief executive officer of Tesla Inc.
and Space Exploration Technologies Corp. and has several other pet projects,
including a venture to bore tunnels for roads or tube-based transportation
systems known as the hyperloop, and another project for the responsible
development of artificial intelligence.
In June, Musk said Neuralink is a priority after much more
demanding commitments to his automotive and rocket companies. “Boring Co. is
maybe 2 percent of my time; Neuralink is 3 percent to 5 percent of my time;
OpenAI is going to be a couple of percent; and then 90-plus percent is divided
between SpaceX and Tesla,” said Musk at the electric-car maker’s annual
shareholder meeting.
Few details are known about Neuralink. The company’s
sparse website says it’s “developing ultra-high bandwith brain-machine
interfaces to connect humans and computers.” It’s also recruiting engineers and
scientists to join the effort.
“No neuroscience experience is required: talent and drive
matter far more,” the company says on the site. “We expect most of our team to
come from other areas and industries.”
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