If a chip that can access a majority of the internet at 16 KB/s is inserted into someone’s brain before Elon Musk dies or resolves yes.
@JamesF A chip that can communicate with an external computer can very easily "access" the internet, without requiring sophisticated hardware.
For example, it's probably relatively easy to build a chip that can do 2-way morse code. The decoded user query can then be interpreted by an AI on the external computer which can then access relevant information on the internet.
@JamesF Right, but that doesn't alter the fact that it's possible to do what your describing with a very simple chip. It's even possible to do this non-invasively with current BCI tech for the brain-to-computer direction.
What do you mean a majority of the internet? So you’re thinking of a processor that can get html and render them to the chip host?
@JamesF How much does that chip need to do? Does it need to show the images without the wearer wearing any other displays like smart glasses?
Does the user browse the internet with their thought, or is it fine to do that by hand?
Or, does there just need to be a chip implant with internet connection, though there is no point in having that in your skull if you are using your phone or some other external hardware to navigate and read anyway.
@costlySignal AFAIK there's no rendering technology (and it would have to be very high fidelity in order to make rendered websites legible!), and it is also not necessary since implanted chips have already been shown to be able to interface with external devices.
I can see how the implanted chip will offer connection to APIs or even to LLM assistants (which also has rendering problems), but then again, that wouldn't be "the majority of the internet".