## Hodak’s Digital Dilemma: Twitter Over Brain Hacks
Max Hodak, a co-founder of Neuralink, has publicly articulated a counterintuitive hierarchy of technological concerns: he’s more worried about Twitter than the potential for brain-computer interface (BCI) hacking.
While his pioneering work at Neuralink places him at the forefront of merging human brains with machines—a field ripe with profound ethical and security questions—Hodak’s immediate anxiety is directed towards the existing landscape of social media. He suggests that the widespread, immediate, and often unregulated influence of platforms like Twitter, with their capacity to amplify misinformation, polarize societies, and shape public perception on a global scale, poses a more present and potent threat.
For Hodak, the daily, pervasive impact of digital discourse manipulation through platforms designed for rapid information spread is a more tangible and urgent danger than the still-nascent, albeit deeply concerning, hypothetical risks of malicious actors compromising direct brain interfaces. It highlights a fascinating perspective from someone deeply embedded in future tech: the present, widespread vulnerabilities in our communication systems are perhaps the most pressing challenges of all.
