Filmmaker Replaces His Eyeball With A Camera To Conduct Documentaries

Filmmaker Replaces His Eyeball With A Camera To Conduct Documentaries

Rob Spence, a filmmaker, has taken a bold step towards becoming a bionic journalist by replacing his eyeball with a minute camera.

Filmmaker Replaces His Eyeball With A Camera To Conduct Documentaries qFilmmaker Replaces His Eyeball With A Camera To Conduct Documentaries Rob Spence lost the use of his eye following a shooting accident when he was nine.But decades on, the Canadian documentary maker had the idea of replacing the eye with a camera.

Filmmaker Replaces His Eyeball With A Camera To Conduct Documentaries

Spence – who now calls himself Eyeborg – said the eye-cam allows him to conduct interviews without the intrusion or distraction of bulky cameras or film crews.

Filmmaker Replaces His Eyeball With A Camera To Conduct Documentaries

But due to the technology within the camera, it can only be used for three minutes at a time without overheating.Spence said:

“Literally everybody [said] it as a joke – ‘Oh, you should get an eye camera’.

Filmmaker Replaces His Eyeball With A Camera To Conduct Documentaries

“The two reactions are, ‘Wow, that’s so cool’ — and, after a few moments’ reflection, ‘But that’s so creepy’.

“I’ve actually started wondering, do we want to have constant video of our lives? It’s just another data set. And I don’t know the answer, but I think no, we don’t want that. But it’s coming anyway.”

Filmmaker Replaces His Eyeball With A Camera To Conduct Documentaries filmmaker 6

The eye-cam resembles a regular prosthetic eye but it is embedded with a camera.Spence cannot see out of the lense but a what the ‘eye’ can see is visible from a handheld monitor.

The 43-year-old can switch the camera on and off at the tap of a button.

—UK mirror

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