Writing
I write about neurotechnology, accessibility, AI ethics, and the human implications of emerging technology. My work focuses on asking hard questions about who benefits when we build the future—and who gets left behind.
Medium
I publish technical tutorials, educational explainers, and essays about brain-computer interfaces on Medium. My articles have reached 3,000+ readers and have been featured in multiple neurotechnology publications and newsletters.
Topics I cover include:
- Building accessible brain-computer interfaces
- Technical methods for BCI prototyping with Arduino and Python
- The accessibility gaps in current neurotechnology
- Making complex neuroscience concepts understandable to non-experts
- The ethics of neural interfaces and cognitive augmentation
Interlinked Newsletter
Interlinked was a tech ethics newsletter I founded in 2022 that grew to 5,000+ subscribers. Over two years, I published 100,000+ words—roughly two novels' worth—exploring AI, neurotechnology, biotech, and the intersection of emerging technology and human values.
The newsletter examined questions like:
- What happens when AI systems make decisions about human lives?
- Who owns the data from your brain when you use a neural interface?
- How do we build technology that serves human flourishing, not just efficiency?
- What does it mean to augment human capability ethically?
I archived the newsletter in 2024 to focus on other projects, but the work represents two years of sustained thinking about the technologies that will fundamentally reshape what it means to be human.
Amplifitica
Amplifitica is a 50,000-word science fiction anthology I self-published in 2023. The collection uses speculative fiction to explore ethical questions across AI, neurotechnology, and biotechnology.
Sometimes the best way to understand technology's implications is to imagine the worlds it might create. The stories in Amplifitica examine consciousness, agency, and what it means to be human when the boundaries keep shifting. Each story grapples with a different ethical dilemma emerging from current research in AI and neuroscience.
Eon Magazine
I'm a two-time top 2% finalist (out of 5,000+ entries) in Eon Magazine's ethics essay contest. My essays explored AI consciousness and neural privacy—topics that sit at the uncomfortable intersection of philosophy, neuroscience, and technology policy.
The work was recognized for rigor and clarity in explaining complex technical concepts with significant ethical implications. Writing for a general audience about highly technical topics requires distilling without oversimplifying, and maintaining intellectual honesty while making ideas accessible.
Why I Write
I write because the technologies being built today—neural interfaces that read thoughts, AI systems that make life-altering decisions, biotech that could fundamentally alter human biology—are advancing faster than our collective ability to think through their implications.
Someone needs to ask the hard questions. Someone needs to make the complex concepts accessible. Someone needs to consider who gets left behind when we race toward the future.
That's what my writing tries to do: make emerging technology understandable, question who it serves, and explore what it means to build tools that augment humanity while remaining deeply humane.
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