مجید قربانی نژاد

Neuralink and the Cyborg Era: When Your Brain Connects to the Internet

Elon Musk announced Neuralink will begin mass production of Brain-Computer Interfaces in 2026 with automated surgery. With $650M funding and a target of 20,000 annual implants, the Cyborg Era has begun.

On December 31, 2025, Elon Musk announced that Neuralink will begin "high-volume production" of its Brain-Computer Interface in 2026 — with nearly fully automated surgery. This is no longer a science fiction

experiment. With $650 million in fresh funding, FDA breakthrough status for speech restoration, and a target of 20,000 annual implants by 2031, Neuralink is moving from lab to mass production. But is society

ready for a world where brains connect to the internet? Welcome to the Cyborg Era — where the line between human and machine is blurring. [IMAGE_PLACEHOLDER_1] From Experiment to Mass Production: Musk's

Historic Announcement On the last day of 2025, Elon Musk made a historic announcement: Neuralink is going into "high-volume production" in 2026. What does this mean? It means the company is no longer conducting

limited trials — it's preparing for mass production of Brain-Computer Interfaces. But this isn't just about production. Musk also announced that implant surgery will become "nearly fully automated." This

means the company's R1 robot — which can place ultra-thin electrodes with micrometer precision into the brain — is transitioning from prototype to production system. Why does this matter? Because brain

surgery is one of the most complex and dangerous medical procedures. If Neuralink can automate it, it can reduce costs, minimize risks, and scale up. This is the difference between a few dozen patients

per year and thousands. "We're starting high-volume production in 2026. Surgery will be nearly fully automated. The threads pass through the dura without needing to remove it." — Elon Musk, December 31,

Read Full Article