Facebook to Buy Startup for Controlling Computers With Your Mind
Facebook to Buy Startup for
Controlling Computers With Your Mind
Kurt Wagner September 23, 2019
The closely held four-year-old startup, which has dozens of
employees and has raised tens of millions in venture capital, uses a bracelet
to measure neuron activity in a subject’s arm to determine movement that person
is thinking about, even if they aren’t physically moving. That neuron activity
is then translated into movement on a digital screen. Facebook declined to
comment on the price of the acquisition.
Technology like CTRL-Labs’s may someday be a crucial part of
products like augmented reality glasses, where a user might want to control a
computer without the need for buttons or a keyboard. “Your hands could be in
your pocket, behind you,” explained Thomas Reardon, chief executive officer of
CTRL-Labs, at an industry conference last December. “It’s the intention [to
move], not the movement” itself that controls the avatar, he said.
Facebook has been pushing deeper into augmented reality
technology, including the development of a hands-free pair of AR glasses. In
2017, it announced a “brain-computer interface” that could someday let people
turn their thoughts into actual text on a screen by monitoring signals in the
brain. The CTRL-Labs technology is attempting to solve a similar problem.
“The wristband will decode those [neural] signals and translate
them into a digital signal your device can understand,” wrote Andrew Bosworth,
Facebook’s head of AR and virtual reality, in a post announcing the deal. “It
captures your intention so you can share a photo with a friend using an
imperceptible movement or just by, well, intending to.”
The purchase comes at a challenging time for Facebook, which is
under two separate U.S. antitrust investigations. The inquiries mean any
acquisition the company makes will be under intense scrutiny from regulators as
they question whether Facebook is already too big and powerful.
“CTRL-Labs and Facebook are not competitors. Facebook does not
currently have or make this technology,” a Facebook spokeswoman said of the
deal announced on Monday, adding that the company will work with regulators to
secure any needed approvals. “CTRL-Labs’s technology is an innovative input
that Facebook hopes will be used to significantly improve the upcoming Facebook
AR/VR experiences a few years down the road to fundamentally improve the user
experience.”
New York-based CTRL-Labs has raised $67 million, according to
Crunchbase, and has a high-profile list of investors, including Spark Capital,
Google’s GV, Amazon.com Inc.’s Alexa Fund, and Founders Fund. CTRL-Labs
employees will join Facebook’s Reality Labs team, which works on AR and VR
products.
©2019 Bloomberg L.P.
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