Computer pioneer warns the metaverse 'could make reality disappear' 

Computer pioneer warns the metaverse 'could make reality disappear' 
Computer pioneer warns the metaverse 'could make reality disappear' 

One of the world's leading computer engineers believes the metaverse, the idea that caused Mark Zuckerberg to rebrand his whole company, could one day 'make reality disappear.'

In a recent op-ed, Louis Rosenberg, a computer scientist known for developing the first functional augmented reality system at Air Force Research Laboratory and founding virtual reality company Immersion Corporation, believes that by integrating virtual reality and augmented reality and having people interact in the digital realm for a significant portion of their day, it could 'alter our sense of reality' and distort 'how we interpret our direct daily experiences.'

'Our surroundings will become filled with persons, places, objects, and activities that don’t actually exist, and yet they will seem deeply authentic to us,' Rosenberg penned in the piece, published by Big Think.

Although he did not specifically mention old Zuckerberg or Meta by name, Rosenberg made a clear reference that he is deeply worried about the 'platform providers' that will have the infrastructure. 

One of the world's leading computer engineers believed the metaverse could one day 'make reality disappear.' Louis Rosenberg (pictured) is known for developing the first functional augmented reality system at Air Force Research Laboratory

One of the world's leading computer engineers believed the metaverse could one day 'make reality disappear.' Louis Rosenberg (pictured) is known for developing the first functional augmented reality system at Air Force Research Laboratory

Rosenberg is deeply worried about the 'platform providers' that will have the metaverse infrastructure. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has previously suggested the metaverse will be the future of his company

Rosenberg is deeply worried about the 'platform providers' that will have the metaverse infrastructure. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has previously suggested the metaverse will be the future of his company

'...I am concerned about the legitimate uses of AR by the powerful platform providers that will control the infrastructure,' Rosenberg added. 

Zuckerberg has previously suggested the metaverse is the future of his company, and has been talking up the idea since July.

'And my hope, if we do this well, I think over the next five years or so, in this next chapter of our company, I think we will effectively transition from people seeing us as primarily being a social media company to being a metaverse company,' Zuckerberg said in a July interview with The Verge

What is the metaverse?

The 'metaverse' is a set of virtual spaces where you can game, work and communicate with other people who aren't in the same physical space as you. 

Facebook explained: 'You'll be able to hang out with friends, work, play, learn, shop, create and more. 

'It's not necessarily about spending more time online — it's about making the time you do spend online more meaningful.'

While Facebook is leading the charge with the metaverse, it explained that it isn't a single product one company can build alone. 

'Just like the internet, the metaverse exists whether Facebook is there or not,' it added. 

'And it won't be built overnight. Many of these products will only be fully realized in the next 10-15 years.' 

Advertisement

Rosenberg, 62, also worries that augmented reality technology, such as glasses (like those produced by Meta and reportedly being worked on by Apple) or contacts will eventually force people to 'become thoroughly dependent on the virtual layers of information projected all around us.'

'It will feel no more optional than internet access feels optional today,' Rosenberg, who made his fortune in technology, explained.

'You won’t unplug your AR system because doing so will make important aspects of your surroundings inaccessible to you, putting you at a disadvantage socially, economically, and intellectually.

'The fact is, the technologies we adopt in the name of convenience rarely remain optional — not when they are integrated into our lives as broadly as AR will be.'

In addition to the fact he notes society is living in 'dangerous times,'

read more from dailymail.....

PREV NASA is making a big announcement about Mars TODAY - here's what we expect to ... trends now
NEXT PlayStation 5 Pro will be an 'enormous' jump in tech with 8K resolutions and ... trends now