A Montana-based company, Gaize, has developed a device that can scan the user’s eye and use crazy futuristic robotic intelligence to detect THC tampering.
According to company founder Ken Fichtler, US law enforcement has already agreed to use the technology, but he could not specify which ones.
“I’m going to start all of this off by saying I’m a cannabis pro. I am for the legalization of cannabis. I’m doing this because I see a clear need at the federal level to have a product to detect impairment so we can keep the roads safe,” Fichtler said.
The device is similar to a kind of virtual reality helmet that a police officer would hypothetically place on the head of a driver suspected of smoking a fridge. It shrouds the suspect in darkness for a few moments before shining a bright light to electronically scan the movement of the suspect’s eyeballs.
“The eyes are the window to the soul. The eyes provide a remarkably clear picture of a person’s mental state. They are full of involuntary micro-movements and reflex responses that convey information about a person’s impairment or sobriety,” Gaize said. website States.
According to Fichtler, the scan cannot be used as evidence in court, much like a traditional breathalyzer, but police officers can use it in the field if they suspect someone is stoned in order to completely rule out their own bias or equation. Gaize cannot yet quantify impairment like a traditional breathalyzer does, but it can basically indicate whether the person is drunk enough that their eye reacts to the stimulus differently than it normally would.
“You can’t just measure THC and say, ‘Yeah, okay, this guy is stoned because he has five nanograms of THC in his body,’ can you? It just doesn’t work that way,” Fichtler said. “What we’re doing is actually directly measuring how impairment manifests in the body, which I think is a much more rational, measured, and fair route.”
Fichtler said the test is based on several different studies that spanned 40 years, including a clinical study of 350 participants. test Gaize behaved. A quick search for “how cannabis affects eye movements” indeed shows several peer-reviewed studies on the subject dating back to at least 1979. As with most scientific studies, there is plenty of room for misinterpretation or a mistake, but try as I might, I might not find much to challenge the science behind this technology. Turns out the eyeballs are just dirty little snitches that will sell stoners at every turn.
“There are a lot of changes happening and a lot of them are happening on a scale that a human couldn’t necessarily see unless they were looking very closely or even using a magnifying glass. or something like that. Our product is sensitive enough that we can detect these really minute changes,” Fichtler said.
Fichtler made a point of saying that Gaize wouldn’t sell the technology arbitrarily to be used for nefarious purposes, but if you work a dangerous job or like to get high on your morning commute, you might find yourself staring at the bright light of a Gaize headphones soon.
Fichtler was unable to provide High Times with an estimated date when law enforcement might begin rolling out the use of these headsets, but for what it’s worth, he appeared to be speaking with the voice of a man who had signed one or more non-disclosure clauses. agreements, rather than a man waiting for orders to start coming in.
“It’s being evaluated by some very high-profile departments,” Fichtler said. “Not all of them have adopted it yet, but some have. Hopefully in a few years this may be a common practice.
Your point of view caught my eye and was very interesting. Thanks.