Neuralink receives FDA clearance for human testing

May 30, 2023

Neuralink, a pioneering implant company co founded by Elon Musk, has announced that it has obtained clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to commence trials on humans using its microchips.

Neuralink’s microchips, which have been tested on monkeys, can decode brain impulses and transfer data through Bluetooth. The chips are designed to empower disadvantaged people by addressing the likes of paralysis and blindness, allowing the patients to interact with technology. Clinical studies for human usage are on the horizon as the company overcomes safety hurdles faced during the FDA clearance procedure.

The FDA certification was described by Neuralink as a “important first step,” and it expressed thanks for the joint efforts of their team and the regulatory agency. While the firm would not share specifics on participant recruitment for the trials, it did promise the public that safety, accessibility, and dependability will be prioritized throughout the engineering process.

Neuralink also admits to having a propensity to overstate the speed of its execution, which it intends to rectify in the future. While the firm is not currently actively recruiting trial participants, it has pledged to publish further information in the near future.

The sources for this piece include an article in BBC.

Top Stories

Related Articles

April 21, 2026 Google has warned that advances in quantum computing could expose Bitcoin to theft during active transactions, urging more...

April 20, 2026 Everyday digital and administrative frustrations from cancelling subscriptions to dealing with spam calls are costing American households more...

April 20, 2026 The Stop Killing Games campaign presented its case to the European Parliament this week, marking its first more...

April 15, 2026 Royal Bank of Canada says Canada experienced a net capital outflow of $1 trillion between 2015 and more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn