Coming from what sounds like a bunch of tech bros, this sounds deeply dystopian - sure, we'll work you to death even harder during the day, but that won't matter - you can be and do what you like in your dreams.
Imagine a hard day's work, 16 hours of slogging while you're awake
You get home, eat something and then head to bed. You put on your headband and select some setting on your phone and then drift off to sleep.
Now you are working your third job, while you sleep. Solving captchas. A/b testing app logo designs. Completing surveys on products you've bought while you're awake.
Stuff that AI will never be able to do because the value is from being human. And yet is simple enough to do in your sleep.
You wake up with a few less cents in your overdraft and you're ready to start a brand new day...
Oh for sure - but that bit comes later - we need to figure out how to monetize the lucid dreams first. If we get to that point, inserting advertising seems pretty plausible too.
The ability to have sex in the dream is another $80 / month
The ability to choose your sexual partner is $30 / encounter
Flying is VIP only ($200 / month tier)
VIP does not include sex dreams, which must be purchased separately with a $10 discount for VIP subscribers!
"What is not known, yet, is whether TUS can induce or stabilize lucid dreams, though the Prophetic team is banking on a positive answer to this open question. Its wearable headband prototype, the Halo, was developed with the company Card79 and can currently read EEG data of users. Over the next year, Prophetic aims to use the dataset from their partnership with the Donders Institute to train machine learning models that will stimulate targeted neural activity in users with ultrasound transducers as a means of inducing lucid dreams."
That's a pretty big caveat. Who the fuck would sign up to be their guinea pig for testing this? A huge part of training these models is providing feedback when it gets things wrong, but we're talking brains here.
What is not known, yet, is whether TUS can induce or stabilize lucid dreams
Wollberg and Berry expressed confidence that their approach will work based in part on the successful induction of lucid dreams by other methods, including a 2014 study that found “stimulation in the lower gamma band during REM sleep influences ongoing brain activity and induces self-reflective awareness in dreams.”