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Pentagon's Cyborg Beetle Spies Take Off

Perhaps you are not particularly worried about the idea of remote-controlled insects spying on you, on behalf of the Pentagon. Darpa-funded researchers at the University of California, Berkeley would like to disabuse you of that notion. They've succeeded in "controlling a live rhinoceros beetle by radio," Tech-On reports.

Researchers hooked a series of six electrodes up to the brain and muscles of the insect. Then, during a demonstration at the MEMS 2009 academic conference in Sorrento, Italy, "they equipped the beetle with a module incorporating a circuit to send signals to the electrodes, wireless circuit, microcontroller and battery. The university has so far succeeded in several experiments of electrically controlling insects, but it used a radio control system this time."

The researchers used rhinoceros beetles in this experiment because they can carry a weight of up to 3 [grams]. And another reason is that they look cool, according to the university.

It's one of a number of Darpa-backed experiments, to develop insect spies. The University of Michigan has its own cyborg beetles. University of Georgia researchers are implanting mini-machines into larval moths, so they can live to a ripe, old, remote-controlled age. Then there's the idea to use sex-starved insects to follow bank robbers. Seriously.


Click to view image: '76a630112963-rcbugfordefense.jpg'

Added: Jan-29-2009 Occurred On: Jan-29-2009
By: GI-Gizmo
In:
Arts and Entertainment
Tags: spy, bugs, beetles, rc, espionage, intelligence, CIA, cyborg, insect
Marked as: approved
Views: 4931 | Comments: 9 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 1 | Shared: 1 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 1
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  • Comment of user '' has been deleted by moderator!
    • It'll probably drive them into ever increasing levels of absurd thinking, would be funny to see.

      Posted Jan-29-2009 By 

      (0)

  • You will be assimilated.

    Posted Jan-29-2009 By 

    (1)

  • LOL, designed to follow bank robbers? That thing would get stamped on or splatted on a car windscreen.

    Posted Jan-29-2009 By 

    (0)

  • Comment of user 'timthetoolmn' has been deleted by moderator!
  • Oh look a bug w/ a motherboard on its back, humm....so anyway back to the conspiring against the government...

    Posted Jan-29-2009 By 

    (0)

  • Hahaha.

    I guess Intelligence couldn't hire an agent to that for them.

    Hahaha.

    What are you going to do: double cross a beetle???

    Posted Jan-29-2009 By 

    (0)

  • well, they already have trained aquatic mammals, so what the hell. You'd think they would have better luck with more warm and fuzzy type animals, though. Most people would discourage big-ass fierce looking bugs getting anywhere near them.

    Posted Jan-29-2009 By 

    (0)

  • Raid sales are gonna go up along with tin foil !

    Posted Jan-29-2009 By 

    (0)