Pablo Torre Finds Out - Poaching Data, Little Dragon: Uncovering China's Secret War for Athlete Brainwaves
Episode Date: September 16, 2025Superstars like Jannik Sinner and Mikaela Shiffrin wear a headset to train their minds and get in the zone. But a six-month investigation by Hunterbrook Media, in collaboration with PTFO, uncovered th...e technology's secret funding by entities linked to the Chinese government — plus partnerships with robotics companies helping to train super-soldiers of the future. Hunterbrook's Sam Koppelman examines the potential impact on AI, mind control, state surveillance, cognitive warfare... and one very surprised Super Bowl champion.Read the full Hunterbrook investigation into BrainCo at https://hntrbrk.com/brainco/ or listen to the Hunterbrook podcast, The Hunt, wherever you get your podcasts.(Pablo Torre Finds Out is independently produced by Meadowlark Media and distributed by The Athletic. The views, research and reporting expressed in this episode are solely those of Pablo Torre Finds Out and Hunterbrook Media and do not reflect the work or editorial input of The Athletic or its journalists.) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
I believe in training the brain, but you got to be careful who you do it with.
Right after this ad.
I'm trying to figure it if you can make the thing light up on your head.
There's some button that can make it light up, though.
I don't know if I charged it.
Oh, wait.
The lighting will play.
Oh, fuck.
There it is.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, boom.
Now we're talking.
I do want to begin by acknowledging what people on YouTube are seeing,
but listeners may not discern, which is that I'm wearing a very weird electronic headband.
Also, I'm sitting across from returning PTFL correspondent Sam Cappellman,
the publisher of Hunterbrook Media,
who was last seen helping us investigate billionaire Phoenix Sun's owner and mortgage king, Matt Isbio.
We tried to warn the Phoenix Suns fans.
I feel like we did a pretty good job warning everybody of the
the dystopian future that was also to come for the Phoenix Suns and the NBA?
100%.
It was like if you like how Matt Ishbia is running his mortgage company,
you're going to love how he's going to run your favorite basketball team.
I wish we could just spend another hour talking about mortgages and the Phoenix Suns,
but there is another dystopian future I need to acknowledge.
It's the one that was promised to us by comic books, by sci-fi movies,
that we both, that all of us sort of inhaled growing up because now, Sam, we got,
robots. We have humans just actively falling in love with artificial intelligence. And we also
have a sporting event that happened just last month in August that was effectively ignored by my
very serious colleagues in sports media here at America, despite the fact that it looked like this.
This is not your average sports tournament. At what is billed as the first ever world humanoid robot
games, the athletes come in all shapes, sizes, and structure to compete in events ranging from
running to kickboxing to soccer.
For three days, human handlers from 16 countries are putting machines through the motions
to show the potential of embodied AI as well as its limitations.
It isn't about winning or losing, but it's a way to trial the robots in agility,
endurance, and battery life.
I mean, those robots were, like, throwing punches and, like, slowly kicking soccer balls like toddlers.
100%.
I mean, to be clear, the humanoid robot games looked kind of ridiculous.
But what's important to understand is that what you saw broadcast in that tournament was just the early days.
The Model T equivalent of these robots.
I mean, I hope so, because, for the record, the first-ever world humanoid robot games,
which was allegedly not about winning or losing as that kind culture warrior of a broadcaster, apparently.
Participation trophies for all of the human rights.
Orrin slice, robot orange slices for all the robots.
That whole event was dominated, actually, by one company, by this Chinese robotics company named Unitary, because all those robots that didn't look like they know ball got apparently blown out by the Michael Phelps of robots.
They won 11 medals.
They set multiple records, which apparently are a thing we're tracking now as well.
And this gets to the part of the story that we spent six months investigating at Hunterbrook.
which is that China is working on pairing this humanoid robotics technology
with something called brain computer interfaces.
Yes.
BCI.
And so the Cold War had the nuclear arms race.
The 60s had the race to the moon.
Today, China and the U.S.
are locked in a battle over who can master the human brain itself.
And I think that big headline does need a little more explanation.
Sure.
Because I get that, like, it's robots and AI everywhere,
but the brain, how do they want to master and win the brain?
You've probably seen Elon Musk with the neuralink
where it can help paraplegics walk.
There's all sorts of good, positive use cases for this technology.
Inspirational, like, I think of that story earlier this year
where they enabled a quadriplegic from Arizona
to control a computer using his brainwaves,
and he could play chess, he could browse the internet,
he could play video games, he could tweet.
I think it just became intuitive for me,
to start imagining the cursor moving.
Basically, it was like using the force on a cursor.
The thing is, China's prioritizing what it calls cognitive warfare,
which is that this technology, as it develops,
is going to be able to do things like read your brain,
see if you're responding positively or negatively,
something you see in the world,
catch you if you're lying or disloyal.
They're going to hack the human.
brain is what you're saying. They're going to hack the human brain. That's the idea.
So this whole technology, which China has made a priority, the endgame here insofar as you can see it,
just top line would be what? The end game would be to be able to understand people's thoughts
when they think them without having to wait for those people to share those thoughts in public.
Which feels useful to a government like China's or ours, frankly.
Absolutely.
And then there's one other thing that the government seems excited about using brain control interface technology for.
And it's pairing this technology with the humanoid robots.
The ones we just saw.
Correct.
To create what the Chinese Communist Party has called super soldiers.
The super soldier, to me, I grew up, Sam, knowing that Captain America was the original super soldier, right?
But when I think of the American side of the space race, I do think of Neurrelink.
I do think of Elon.
In America, Neurrelink's the name you've heard of, but they're not the only major player.
Just like China, the U.S. government is investing heavily in brain computer interface technology.
It's a technological and a military imperative.
There's companies like Synchron that's partnered with Apple.
And then just last month in August, there was this Bloomberg story.
But there's a big American BCI company that was faith.
founded at Harvard in 2015,
and is now, quote,
aiming to compete with Elon Musk's Neurrelink.
And so this company, this American company,
I want to say that the name of it,
it just feels optimized in the same way
that Netflix has that show about NFL quarterbacks
that they just called quarterback.
Correct, yes.
Neurlinks American-born rival startup
is named BrainCo.
Which is perfect.
According to Bloomberg,
BrainCo is in talks to security.
roughly $100 million in pre-IPO financing at a valuation of more than $1.3 billion,
in part because of the weird electronic headband that you're wearing right now.
This headband, which is called the FocusCom, and is in fact available for the low, low price of $279.99 online,
is studded, as you were alluded to, with these electrodes that have been reading my brainwaves while podcasting year,
through my skin, as a commercial helpfully explains.
It's time to change your mind.
Now there's a wearable that can help train your brain for a better focus and a calmer mind.
Introducing Focus Calm.
Focus Calm uses EEG technology to detect and analyze the activity in your brain,
while proprietary algorithms translate those signals into your focus column score.
In the app, you'll practice raising your focus calm score and keeping it high
while staying alert and focused.
You'll see your progress week by week
as your brain gets stronger,
more consistently relaxed at work.
Yeah, I just feel very consistently relaxed right now
with you in studio.
Okay, well, I'm sorry
because the next thing is probably going to ruin
that moment of Zen.
The reason I reached out to you
to collaborate on this investigation
is that there's something that BrainCo
doesn't want anyone in America to know.
Because, yes, the story of BrainCo
is that it was founded out of Harvard
by a Harvard PhD slash professor
who taught a course on brain computer interface technology
and it even had the dean of Harvard's graduate school of education
as an advisor.
Yes.
But according to documents that Hunterbrook Media has obtained,
BrainCo itself has been funded
for almost a decade
by entities linked directly to the Chinese Communist Party.
Yes.
And in recent years,
BrainCo has largely shut down its U.S. operation,
move to China,
where it's now going public at that $1.3 billion valuation.
And it has quietly become one of the most important companies in the world
to the Chinese government and the Chinese Communist Party.
Which would seem to have an important bit of context
given everything that we just said at the top of the show.
Correct.
An American company with years of research from Harvard and MIT scientists
is now on China's team in the next space race.
And as much as people listening might be thinking,
what are these two assholes going on about?
Why are they the only two people who care about this thing?
On some level, I should point out here that in April of 2025, three prominent U.S. senators
happened to publish a letter with the goal of warning America about what they called
the rapid development and commercialization of brain computer interface technologies.
The senators wrote, quote,
the risks posed by the exploitation of sensitive neural data are not hypothetical.
The Department of Commerce has determined that Chinese companies are using biotechnology
to support military end uses, including, quote,
purported brain control weaponry, and quote.
Brain control weaponry.
Chill, casual stuff.
Normal sports podcast material.
And yes, according to the Chinese government's own website,
quote, the country seeks to achieve key technological breakthroughs in the industry by 2027.
Which also brings us back around to, yes, those now increasingly terrifying humanoid
athlete robots that were running around and punching stuff. But also a question that I think is worth
asking, which is what is the source of the neural data that everybody is warning about that the
government of China is apparently quite interested in? Pablo, this might be the most insane part
of the story. What we are reporting today, a portion of that neural data has been secretly harvested
from the unwitting brains of some of the greatest athletes in the world.
Which is why, clearly, I decided to join you in investigating this story,
and also why I think it's probably a time for me to take this headband off.
Probably a good idea.
Yeah, just a little bit safer if it's just on the table over there.
So, Sam, I want to establish that this headband that I was just wearing,
called the Focuscom, is not just like a random thing.
it is actually incredibly popular in the world of sports
because it enables athletes to track their brainwaves
for performance reasons, right?
You can see when you're calm, when you're stressed,
you can get in the zone,
is what the whole advertising around this is.
The thing about the power users
of this quietly Chinese government-backed device
that I think people need to know here
is that these aren't just like any athletes.
We're talking about Italy's famously focused Yonik Center, who trains with the Focuscom.
We're talking about the former number one women's tennis player in the world, Iga Suyatek, who is using it every day, the number one alpine skier of all time, American gold medalist Michaela Schifrin, who uses it as also a bunch of English Premier League soccer players do.
The Focuscom website also says it's currently used by, quote, over 20 NCAA teams, including the University of Kentucky,
in addition to quote professional and Olympic organizations
across every major sport.
US weightlifting is a partner,
USA bobsled,
Skeleton is a partner.
Yes, you can actually see some of these logos,
a USA weightlifting logo is on the box of the headband
that I took off.
And if anybody is wondering why, at this point,
all these athletes believe in this connection
between brain computer interface technology
and actual athletic results,
I do think it's worth hearing from
somebody whose Zoom background
happens to provide an
answer to that question.
You see, I got a Lombardi Trophy.
Not the real one,
but looks just like it.
I guess that's me right there
in a bucks uniform.
Someone sent me that. I thought that was cool
an action figure. And I got some of
the helmets from the teams I played
for, the Giants, the Patriots,
San Francisco 49ers, my last
team, and all the tags
are from Super Bowls I played
from my locker.
So, Sam, this is longtime NFL defensive back, Logan Ryan,
a guy who played 11 seasons in the NFL, won two Super Bowls,
as you see those replica trophies indicate with the Patriots.
But what's funny to me is that after Logan Ryan left the pats,
he wound up on the Tennessee Titans,
and he is the answer to the question of
who's the guy who intercepted the last pass
that Tom Brady would ever throw in a Patriots uniform.
I mean, it's, we'll never see this run again, Jim.
Brady's pass.
It's intercepted and returned for a touchdown by our Patriots.
And after that, by the way, Logan Ryan became a Tampa Bay buck,
and yet another piece of memorabilia happened to enter his possession.
I picked off Aaron Rogers when I was on the Bucks,
and that completed my run of picking off Peyton Manning,
Tom Brady, and Aaron Rogers.
So I finished my quest of picking off all the goats of my error.
So that's what the Buc season was for.
he has like a wall in his home
with like the heads of the greatest quarterback.
Yes, everybody he has slain.
And I was just thinking that you interviewed Logan Ryan
because it was another way to rub something into Bill Belichick.
Yes.
I'm surrounding the Belichick Empire
in all sorts of journalistic ways.
But speaking of this question of like, okay,
the invasiveness around these characters,
I should point out that Logan Ryan says
he did all this stuff because of this device that read his brain.
And he trusted it so much, actually, that he signed up to personally endorse the Focuscom
and even appeared in a commercial for it in 2022.
Well, how I got introduced to it to start is I would use yoga as part of my recovery.
And one of the yoga instructors that I was working with was also talking about breath work.
So I started doing breath work with her.
Then she introduced me to a device that you put on your head and to act.
you play on your phone and you would play a race car game.
And the more that you were in the right breathing and the right mental space,
the faster your car would go.
And the harder you tried, the slower it would go.
And it made me realize that we can't just will everything to happen.
So when I perform on the field, I could better off get in a flow state.
Because any athlete, you know the story when they're in the zone or it's the ninth inning,
Michael Jordan and LeBron, their pulses like this and everyone else is going crazy,
they keep themselves in a calm flow state.
So when the two minute happened or the last drive against Tom Brady's happening,
I'm not freaking out like some players, like most are.
What was the name of the company that you partnered with?
Oh, I think they changed, I think they changed names.
I don't want to misquote it.
Let me get back to you on it.
Please.
The bigger company's name is BrainCo.
Okay, so this is probably where we should properly introduce BrainCo and its founder, Han Bicheng.
Yes, because I was long gone at Harvard when Brain Co was being founded by that guy in 2015,
but you were actually on campus, I believe.
I was, I was. I think we might have been in slightly different crowds,
but I was there when he was there.
He was studying neuroscience, and he founded BrainCo a year before Elon Musk even started NeurLink.
Right.
And by 2017, Han B. Chang was being honored by MIT Technology Review.
as one of their top innovators under 35.
And the headline for MIT Technology Review
read, quote,
an inventor that brings brain machine interface
out of science fiction into reality, end quote.
Okay, so Elon and Neurlink were focused on brain implants,
where you've got to drill a hole into someone's head
into your skull.
To make it work.
Han B. Chang set up an office in Sunny, Somerville, Massachusetts.
Where I used to get drunk in college.
100%.
And he built a gentler, more consumer-friendly,
device that you just wear on top of your head. And he also created a robot prosthetic hand,
operated with that same handband technology that would go on to be named one of Time Magazine's
100 best innovations of 2019. And as the host of one of Time Magazine's 100 best podcasts of all time,
I can tell you that I, too, trust the gentle touch of this robotic hand. Absolutely. And you are not
alone. Plenty of academics got on board with BrainCo as well. As I mentioned,
to BrainCo's advisor was the dean of Harvard's Graduate School of Education,
who went on to become the president of the University of Virginia.
According to an interview with B. Chang in Chinese media,
he said, quote, most of our core teams are from Harvard University
and the MIT Brain Science Center, very legit places.
And a Harvard grad named Max Newellyn is who became the president of BrainCo USA.
He was working as a research scientist at the company
when BrainCo reportedly announced its seed funding round of $5 million in 2016.
which is a very American success story.
100%, except that Hunterbrook had a reporter in Taiwan
dig into the corporate records
on who actually invested millions of dollars into BrainCo.
And what we found was that BrainCo has been repeatedly financed
by Chinese state-owned enterprises,
including an entity inside China Electronics Corporation,
which is a conglomerate that the U.S. Defense Department has sanctioned.
And so how was the Chinese government hiding their investment then?
Well, actually by 2024, we found that the Chinese government was just straight up investing tens of millions of dollars directly into Brainco.
And I think this would help explain why the biggest initial market, the biggest user base was not hyper-competitive pro athletes, but something I think that is arguably even more competitive.
That's right. It was the Chinese education system, as this 2019 report from the Wall Street Journal explains.
For this fifth grade class, the day begins with putting on a brain wave sensing gout.
The device is made in China and has three electrodes, two behind the ears and one on the forehead.
These sensors pick up electrical signals sent by neurons in the brain.
The neural data is then sent in real time to the teacher's computer.
So while students are solving math problems, a teacher can quickly find out who's paying attention and who's not.
I just got to say that that video,
classrooms of kids wearing the headband that Logan Ryan and I apparently both share,
in common. It's fucking crazy looking. It's absolutely insane. There was a ton of backlash even in
China. Parents were like, I do not want the Chinese Communist Party collecting data on how well my kids
are paying attention in class. Yes. It actually got some coverage here in the United States,
too. And then between like 2020 and 2023, there was this weird era in Brainco's history
where they kind of like stopped sending out press releases. They weren't doing as many interviews
they began to lurk in the shadows a little bit.
The block got hot, even in China.
Even in China, people were like,
what the hell is this shit?
Yeah, which raises questions about how
the American wing of the business was handling this.
Badly, we actually spoke to a former high-level brain co-exec
who told me that almost the entire team in Somerville
was laid off by like 2024 in the first couple months.
Almost nobody was coming into the office.
We actually had a reporter go visit
Brainco's offices three different times.
We never saw more than two people.
Great. That guy, Max Neulen, who was
the president of BrainCo in the United States,
he resigned. And he was
the same guy who was always hyping Brainco
up. Okay, so the president of the company in America
is gone. And meanwhile,
the question that I
think is really important to
ask at this point of the story
is what access does
the Chinese government have
to what was harvested from the brains
of all of these Chinese schoolchildren and all
of these classrooms. Such an important question. And here is where we've got to make clear that in China,
it's not like optional to share information and data with the government. They actually have a
national intelligence law that requires Chinese companies to cooperate with intelligence services when
requested. This, you may remember, is why TikTok was almost banned in the United States. Yes.
But the thing is, like, whereas TikTok knows your preferences for which dances and cooking recipes and
memes you want to watch, BrainCo has data on your actual brainwaves.
Which sounds extraordinarily valuable to said government to the point where, yeah, how do they
handle the fact that it's a flop?
Right. So during this period of time when BrainCo was laying low in the U.S., waiting for
the school controversy to pass, the Chinese government's interest in Brainco's data
doesn't seem ever to have wavered. In fact, BrainCo is now being listed as one of the six
little dragons. The Six Dragons is what people now call a cluster of elite startups here.
China's rising stars in gaming, robotics, AI, and NeuroTech, all working around the clock
to beat Silicon Valley at its own game. These are the six tech firms in the city of
Hanjo that receive special government support, favorable loans, and integration into China's
broader technology ecosystem. The most prominent being Deep Seek, that Little
known startup that upended the AI world in January with its low-cost chatbot.
And there are more. Unitary robotics is seen here as having the potential to do for China's
robotics sector what Deep Sea did in AI. They make humanoid and quadruped robots like G1
EDU that can dance to its own beat and pack a decent punch if that's what you want your
humanoid to do. This is the same.
gold medal-winning technology from the world humanoid robot games that we started with.
Yes, that is robot Michael Phelps.
And that company, Unitary, you're probably not surprised to learn at this point,
is actually officially partnered with BrainCo,
which we know in part because on Unitri's own website,
the company outlines how its robots can be equipped with BrainCo's dexterous hand,
the one from Time magazine,
which is now being showcased at robotics conventions.
Of course.
Where they're not being used to help quadriplegics walk or talk.
tweet, they're being mounted onto full humanoid robots capable of neural control.
Which is to just spell it out, the ability for people to control with their brains, a robot
army of the future. Correct. And of course, the other reason we know about Brainco's partnership
with Unitary is that Hunterbrook Media looked under the hood of Unitree's source code, and we found
that they actually have an integration with BrainCose prosthetics right in their code base.
And by the way, while you were sniffing around the code base of this robotics company,
what the U.S. government was doing, with the U.S. House of Representatives in particular was doing in May of this year, was send a letter of their own warning about unitary.
And their, quote, well-documented ties to the Chinese military and the CCP.
Which is probably a good time to mention that Brainco's offices in Hanjo, not to be confused with the Somerville offices, they're right next to unitries.
And that office has hosted visits from the Chinese premier, the CCP's number two guy after,
President Xi, as well as their minister of science and technology.
We've also seen photos and videos of BrainCo CEO, Han B. Chang, being visited by the chief executive
of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, which is a Beijing installed figure known for
crushing democratic protest. And what we're seeing here just in this video is another bit of
tape. It's a guy who lost both hands using two of those BrainCo robotic.
arms to draw calligraphy, to shake hands. Another guy is playing the piano, Sam, to speak to
the dexterousness of the robot arm. This is, from a pure, like, science perspective, objectively
incredible. It's fucking sick. It's an unbelievable invention, and it makes complete sense why China and
the United States care so much about this technology. So if you're wondering here, as Sam and I were,
how this entire company just got swiped out from under the noses of Brainco's U.S.
leadership team, we tried tracking down James Ryan, the former Harvard Dean, and subsequently,
the president of the University of Virginia, to ask him this very question.
And in an interview with Hunter Brook Media, James Ryan confirmed that he had been an advisor
to BrainCo, and he joined BrainCo because he knew Max Nulen, the since- resigned Brainco
president from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. But in 2023, Ryan said, this is after
the Chinese school children scandal we mentioned,
and around that time when Brainco went dark
and stopped sending out press releases,
he officially stepped down from his advisory role at Brainco,
citing his sparse experience helping out the company.
Now, when asked directly about Brainco's links to the Chinese government,
James Ryan told us that he didn't know anything about that,
and when told that Brinco had plans to IPO,
Ryan said that he would divest from the company
entirely. Quote, I am disturbed and saddened to hear this and very disappointed, obviously.
End quote. In fact, as a U.S. college administrator, Ryan told us that he had been briefed on
attempts by the Chinese government to steal intellectual property from American universities.
He said he even spoke to Max Newellyn about that. And what Newellyn told him, plainly, according to Ryan,
quote, we are not connected to the Chinese government.
End quote.
Now, what Ryan tells us, is this, quote,
I truly hope Max didn't know.
Max Newland did not respond to repeated requests for comment,
and that raised an even bigger unsolved question
for us and the American government
about how exactly brand,
Brainco pivoted and why its business is currently booming in China.
Well, a big part of it is, of course, the data that they're collecting,
which brings us back to BrainCo's roster of some of the world's greatest athletes.
Yes, one of whom, I believe, we left in the middle of our Zoom call.
And, yeah, I should probably tell American Branko spokesman and two-time Super Bowl-winning defensive back,
Logan Ryan, some things.
things that I have learned after the break.
In order to understand how BrainCo pivoted from classrooms full of tiny Chinese school
children with FocusCom headsets, we had to call somebody who was not Chinese and not American,
and I believe may well be the most Italian person that I have ever met.
If you want to make a good Carbonara, you need to have.
have on the table all the ingredients.
If you don't have all the ingredient,
okay, the carbonara
will not be perfect.
So an athlete, a top athlete,
is like the
ingredient on the table
before to be cooked.
Totally.
I just, I love him.
I love this man, despite everything
that we're about to get into
with him, honestly.
He's amazing, especially because Carbonara
only has like five ingredients.
And so it's clear it takes each of them very serious.
Yes, the spice level is important.
You need kick in your carbonara and don't let the egg get scrambled.
Pro tip.
My name is Ricardo Checarelli.
I am a medical doctor, specialized in sport medicine.
I live in Italy.
In this moment, I am in my facility, Formula Medicine Facility, which is in Tuscan, in Varejo, a little town on the beach.
Very nice place for summertime.
So I would recommend to join me as soon as you can because here now the weather is perfect.
I'm basically ready to go move.
I know.
I feel like I can expense that.
Yeah, no, 100%.
We can expense the trip to Tuscany, to a beach town I didn't know was even possible in the Italian countryside.
But that is, of course, Dr. Ricardo Jekorelli, who, beyond being a volunteer ambassador for the Board of Tourism in Tuscany,
is the CEO and founder of a company called Formula Medicine.
And Formula Medicine has been supporting F1 drivers
in mental and physical training for more than 15 years.
Yes, their logo, it's on the boxes of these devices
that are on the table.
You may recall, Sam, how Logan Ryan earlier
was talking about how he was playing that Focuscom game on his phone
where you calm down and the virtual race car goes faster.
Dr. Chekarelli, it turns out,
has been basically using the brain brain.
CoFocusCom to study the exact same thing for years.
Except with actual human race car drivers.
Who happened to be the best in the world.
And so our innovation was to link BrainCo and a heart rate recorder directly implemented
inside our tests.
So it's not for meditation, for relaxing, but it's just like the heart rate recorder
on the treadmill to see how much you activate your brain, your frontal lobe, which is
the frontal lobe is the decision-maker.
But it's the problem of the tennis player
before and during a match.
The problem is how to control.
But how to control not when you are relaxed
in a closed room with a silent
and they do meditation.
The problem is how can I control
when I am on the match point,
on the type break?
So that's the point.
So we train people in the out of the comfort zone.
And the tennis thing is also in his comfort zone.
personally because Dr. Teccarelli, when I talked to him in July, had actually just gotten back
from training the brain of one of his non-F-1 clients who was at Wimbledon winning the tournament
because, yeah, you might recall how Yannick Sinner won one of the most impressive matches
in the recent history of tennis. Janik, he had to learn how to cook. This is what we did
at the beginning when he was 19, 20, 21, because he's a very clear.
ever guy, he understood, and now he's able to do a good carbonara.
Notably, Yonik Sinner, closest thing to a robotic tennis player we've seen.
The greatest living advertisement for Focus and Calm.
He is like a human, humanoid.
Yes.
But the thing is that, obviously, Dr. Chekerelli came to BrainCo when Yonik Sinner was just
19 years old.
He's been partnered with this company for a very long time.
His name is literally on the box.
Yes.
He is also on the website.
When you go, as we did, to order this thing for $279.99.
You see the testimony from this guy.
He's testifying to the greatness of the FocusCom specifically.
And he is not shy about how long and how intimate this partnership is.
I have to say many things to Brinko because when we met them,
we select different kind of device.
then we saw that this was for us the best and more reliable.
And so we con-
Okay, so we knew that he was a BrainCo partner.
What we didn't know was which athletes
have actually been using the Focus column
and giving BrainCo data.
But it sounds like the doctor essentially told you everything.
Yeah, it was sort of like just hearing him name a bunch of people in his phone
that he had also studied the brains of.
We had the here in this gene.
many, many famous
famous athlete
Michaela Schifrey.
Federica Brignone
that won the last
World Championship on the ski.
Palatrini, which has been
one of the best swimmer in
Italy but also winning gold
medal, fans are winning
gold medal in the Olympic Games.
We are already
working with two
football players in Manchester City.
But there is like this other
missing part.
of this, which is, okay, here's this rolodex of athletes that you've been studying, working with,
who've entrusted their careers, their minds to you. And they are very thankful because it seems
to have, in their view, really worked. But in terms of, like, where the data goes, right?
This is a technology story as well, how that data is secured, whether it's encrypted,
is it stored on a hard drive? Is it stored on a cloud somewhere? It all made me think of how
the CCP had announced, as previously mentioned, that there were going to be some key technological
breakthroughs in the industry by 2027, and I wanted to know how do you assure privacy and how do you
work on stuff like making sure that it stays protected, all the brainwave data?
That is a very important question. And I think that was one of our, I don't say problem,
But, you know, when you start the research, like we did many years ago, was a different age.
But more this system is getting out of our limited number of persons, we discovered that was important to have a very important privacy protection.
So we did, obviously, when Brain Co.
give us SDK, this kind of things,
everything has to be protected and private.
But now we have a legal team that is working together with our technicians
to develop a system that they are encrypted,
that they are protected.
That's insane.
Okay, so a couple things.
So there's that.
So one, sounds like the privacy protections,
he says are very important to implement.
They don't exist yet,
even though he's been working with BrainCo since 2019.
Yeah.
And, Pablo, we bought BrainCo devices,
and we looked at their privacy policy.
And it's not great, Bob.
And so I just got to jump in here to point out
that we, of course, reached out for official comment
from BrainCo.
But not before finding out
that BrainCo and the FocusCom's data privacy policy
is kind of like untangling a nest of Christmas lights, seemingly by design.
For instance, if you go to the Brinkgo website,
its privacy policy is littered with references to data collection.
It reads, in part, quote,
we collect data from any given person using our devices and applications,
including people under the age of 18, end quote.
And included in the breakdown of data types collected,
EEG raw data is listed as provided and managed,
But when reached, at long last, for official comment, what BrainCo told PTOFO and Hunterbrook Media on September 4th, 2025 is this, quote,
We don't share user data with anyone.
EEG data received from the BrainCo headband is transmitted to the Focuscom application.
All EEG data remains in the FocusCom application within the user's smart device and is purged from the application at the conclusion of each use.
all accusations about data collection and sharing are false, end quote.
And in fact, when you now visit the privacy policy page for Focuscom specifically,
it mirrors this exact language that we got.
It says that, quote, neither EEG nor IMU raw data is transmitted to BrainCo servers.
And quote.
But it is also worth noting here that the privacy policy page says it was updated to version 2.0,
on September 7, 2025, which is three days after they issued their response to us.
And also, that according to the Internet Archive, which saves earlier cached versions of webpages,
that specific language did not exist in version 1.0 of the policy.
Earlier this year.
But maybe even more revealing is the fact that Sam and the reporting team at Hunterbrook Media
looked under the hood of the BrainCo open source code on GitHub.
and what they found is that BrainCo is letting third-party developers access brain data of users wearing the focus headbands.
This is, quote, user brainwave data, attention data, etc.
And they let those third-party developers access it, quote, every half second,
which is a far cry from its claimed local-only storage policy,
all of which brings us back to sports.
and athletes' brains.
So this is where I do think it's just worth us grounding this in reality.
Because as much as this is very, I mean, truly, just like a parody on some level of itself,
this is what the big data era of sports is like.
We are the children of moneyball, Sam.
And so BrainCo is not a story about the future.
This is the story of right now.
This is a story of who gets access to your increasingly personal biometric data,
which a guy like Logan Ryan, incidentally, is otherwise already pretty aware of.
As athletes, we wear a lot of wearables.
We wear a whoop and we wear a thing to show how fast we run.
And there was a lot of times where, you know, the team would say it's optional,
but everyone has to kind of wear it.
And I would say, well, if I'm 33 and you realize I'm not,
running as fast every practice, how are you using that data, right? Is that going to lead to my release?
There is one last thing that sort of unites all of this. And this is where I'm like, I just wonder if you
were ever told or learned anything about this before this interview. Because the last bit of
information, which we found really interesting and kind of crazy, is that if you get into some
of the open source code, apparently, and this is the GitHub open source code,
of BrainCo.
What they're doing is that they're collecting the brain data of users every half a second.
And in China, companies are obligated to send the data they collect to the government.
And the last thing to just close the circle is that BrainCo has Chinese investment from the CCP.
They're funded by Chinese entities sanctioned by the U.S. government with direct ties to the military.
And I'm like, did Logan know any of this when he decided?
to like, I'm going to try and use this to improve my football career?
Yeah.
No, absolutely not.
You know, I had no idea about that.
I mean, this is, I used them a lot in like 2020.
You know, and I can't say robots and AI wasn't coming, but, you know.
And I just feel obliged, Sam to point out, that I do believe Logan Ryan.
I truly believe that he did not know anything about this when he signed up to be a spokesperson.
No, brain code does not make this obvious.
Right, right.
And so when Logan, and by the way, I proceed.
to tell him about so much of what we just talked about this episode,
you know, about brain co-founder Han B. Chang, about robot humanoid super soldiers,
the letter from the U.S. senators, private neural data, all that on and on.
It just built towards this question that I now have to admit is pretty predictable.
Is that something you wish you had known?
Yeah, absolutely.
You know, and the way it was presented to me obviously is not that way.
So you try to accept to be to get.
better in your field and you're willing to do what it takes legally, obviously, to get better at your
craft. And I believe in training the brain. But you got to be careful who you do it with. You got to
make sure you do your research and you're vetted. And like I said, nobody on my team could even
of thought this is a possibility, but this is the world we live in nowadays with all this type
of AI and technology that who knows is the information that we're putting in, what that could be
used for. And obviously, we need a right to protect ourselves from that. So I don't know how
personalized it is to me. I don't know if they're able to track my thoughts or something with that.
But that's all pretty alarming to me. And definitely to look into that.
He is calm still in all of his assessments of this.
That's what works.
I mean, well, but except for after the Zoom interview, because, and I want to be just fair
to everybody involved, I think it's worth me pointing this out on their behalf.
Logan Ryan and his understandably panicked PR person
who was not on the Zoom call,
but heard about the Zoom call from her client,
they reached out to us here at Pablo Torre finds out
to reiterate how just unbelievably freaked out Logan was
once he sort of realized what this all implied.
Yeah, totally understandable.
Yeah, and I wanted to help him look into that.
I wanted to help figure out, okay, how real are these concerns?
Because as per the TikTok example,
we all are giving our data to some foreign government in the cloud on some level, it feels like.
But is this data actually going to the Chinese government?
And are they going to act upon that?
Is a question that I had for our old friend in Tuscany.
The best athletes that you've trained, whether it's Yonix Center, Charlotte Claire,
Michaela Schifrin, Manchester City, just an incredible roster.
Do you think it's possible that China would use those brainwaves to train their athletes?
that they might get better athletes because of their association with Branco?
Yes, absolutely, yes, absolutely yes.
We are still in contact with them now because they did also a device which is more wearable,
and that we can use in different experiment with aviation, with the military,
because obviously the device has to be wearable and comfortable.
So it's a synergy, it's a project that is a,
running since many years and obviously Braicob was really, really supporting us.
Sam, I don't think that's going to make Logan Ryan feel consistently relaxed.
I do not think it will because it sounds like the doctor just confirmed not only that the
Chinese government might be using these brainwaves, but they might be using them for military
purposes.
And so this is where I should note that military purposes can mean a lot of things.
There is a difference between FocusCom EEG data, for instance,
training human soldiers to perform better in combat scenarios
and using brainwave data to control the robotic limbs of super soldiers.
But at the same time, honestly, in the hands of a foreign adversary,
both not great.
Meanwhile, in their response to our detailed questions, Branko said,
quote, we have no collaboration of any kind with any military in any country.
To the best of our knowledge, our technology is not being used for any military purposes.
We have implemented stringent compliance measures that explicitly require our customers not to use or transfer our technology for prohibited end uses or to prohibited end users, including military applications, end quote.
Grinco also added, somewhat amazingly, quote, to emphasize, we develop and provide dexterous hands for humanoid robots with no affiliation whatsoever to the military.
Our technology is exclusively applied in the fields of embodied intelligence and dexterous manipulation, end quote.
And yet, that's not even the most bizarre exchange that Sam and I experienced while we were trying to get an actual interview with BrainCose founder Han B. Chang for this story.
Because that exchange, that bizarre exchange, occurred over text message.
This one was from a burner number, according to the open source intelligence analysts on our team.
And Pablo, if you would indulge me,
I would just like to read these texts out loud.
Would you be the gray text and I'll be the green?
It's probably best that way.
Okay.
8.50 p.m.
Hello. This BrainCo.
Very smart company.
Hello.
Three exclamation points.
My response, 1021 a.m.
Tried calling you.
Always happy to talk BrainCo.
But seems you called me from a burner.
Try me whenever.
129 p.m.
I BrainCo.
I respond immediately. Totally.
Who are you?
Got impatient five minutes later.
Is this Dr. Hahn?
4.39 p.m. Yes, Dr. Hahn.
And then, like I'm on an episode of Catfish,
how can I confirm that you're really Dr. Hahn?
You ask me if I am Dr. Hahn. I say yes. Thumbs up emoji.
Gangnam style.
Peace sign emoji
Ha ha ha
Can we video chat? We should talk
6.56 p.m.
Yes, it is 7 a.m. in China.
Chinese flag emoji.
I free at my lunch.
Deal.
1 a.m. my time.
1 p.m. yours?
What email should I send a Zoom invite to?
9.08 p.m.
Unsubscribe.
I have to admit it kind of hurt my feeling.
I mean, that's a great burn just at the end of a long text message exchange is being like unsubscribe.
Horrifying.
This is, by the way, like, worry something a different way.
Because the whole question underlying that text exchange is a simple one.
Are you being scammed?
And now the question I think we should ask as we get close to the end of this episode is,
is this headband
really what this
very smart company
says it is?
Is this thing?
Also a scam?
Look, at this point in my life, Sam,
I've done enough investigative journalism
and just buying of stuff
that I tend to see promises
from unicorn tech founders
through the lens of,
is this a scam?
And we have an episode
in which we've established
that this technology is backed
by the Chinese Communist Party,
which is competing in a brain race
with America.
and all of his other stuff.
And so it's fair to wonder whether all of this is also, on some level, just propaganda.
Good question.
So the first thing to note on this front is that I hired a Harvard Crimson reporter
to fact-check Dr. Han B. Chang's Brandtco origin story.
Which is a brilliant move to just outsource it to a younger, hungrier person.
100%.
And what we found out is that first, Dr. Han B. Chang, is a doctor in the sense that Julius Irving is a doctor.
Which is to say not actually a doctor, according to the Harvard registrar.
He never finished his Ph.D., which is worrisome.
Second, BrainCo was indeed founded out of the Harvard Innovation Lab.
But when we spoke to the I-Lab, they told us that they tell every company not to use the
iLabs branding on any of their websites memorabilia.
Brainco has it basically everywhere.
Yeah.
And third, Han B. Chang likes to claim that he taught at Harvard,
specifically a course on brain computer interface technology.
He actually once told an interviewer that he recruited students to the class
by telling them it could teach couples to read each other's minds.
But the reality, according to an email,
we were sent by the course's actual professor,
is that Dr. Hahn was a teaching assistant for like one semester,
and he swears that the course was never branded
as a way to help you read your boyfriend's mind.
Right. And so this question, though,
this now through line of, is this false advertising?
It takes us to a question that,
I don't think he's ever been asked before in human history,
but was Logan Ryan, long-time NFL defensive back,
and President Xi Jinping, the leader of the Chinese Communist Party,
both misled by Branko founder Han B. Chang.
So look, there are smart people who disagree on this.
We spoke to one former technical leader at Branko
and a few experts on neuroscience.
And some of them think that headbands like the ones BrainCo cells don't do much.
They collect a lot of information, but it's hard to parse.
They compare it to standing outside of a stadium and trying to hear individual conversations.
You can hear cheers, but it's not like you can understand what everyone's saying.
Right, and this is sort of like the trade-off.
Neurrelink, Elon, they're drilling holes into skulls and implanting stuff.
BrainCo is sitting at the top of my brow on my skin and is therefore ostensibly
less precise. That's correct, but we also took our findings to Nita Farahani, a professor at Duke
of Law and Philosophy. An actual professor. Who literally wrote the book on BCI. Professor Farahani
was appointed by President Obama to the Presidential Commission for the study of bioethical
issues. She's a particular expertise in cognitive warfare, and she warned me that China, technologically,
has come a very long way when it comes to mining the brain through headbands like the Focuscom.
It's probably useful to look at the broader context of a lot of information that's come out
about China's investments in brain computer interface more recently, which then makes you think,
okay, well, why is China investing so significantly into brain computer interface devices?
Clearly it has some military component to it, some dual-use component to it.
So I asked her, where does BrainCo come into all this?
And what she said is that maybe BrainCo is a way for China to, quote, collect citizen and
athlete data by greenwashing a company claiming it's a Harvard and MIT institution to intentionally
hide from the consumer what data has been collected, where it's going, and who's behind it.
And maybe BrainCo is part of the pathway either to distribute it internationally and be able to
collect biometrics from individuals and other places and or to be able to develop
brain interface technology that is using these devices to be able to share commands,
for example, within the military, or to be able to communicate with a device in an incredibly
secure and very difficult to intercept manner.
And this reminds me of the conversation with Logan Ryan, where he had to like jog his memory
to remember what company he was the spokesman for, actually. Because Brainco, if we go back to
the box on the table, is not on the focuscom box anywhere.
It's not even on the focuscom website.
And by the way, like Dr. Chekarelli's name, also I just realized this, happens to be
misspelled, missing a couple letters there in Chekcarelli.
But at this point, I basically digress.
An article in Nature Communications recently came out of a bunch of Chinese-based researchers
who were at one of the state universities that has significant investment from China in it as well.
And it proposes an incredibly secure mechanism of trying to safeguard what goes from brain signals to a device.
And they were doing it based on a wearable device.
And the level of security that they were developing is far beyond what you would need for financial transactions,
even far beyond what's applied, for example, to classified documents.
Yeah, I mean, the whole thing with the whole thing with that,
Brain Co is it's always a question of whether this is actually this incredible company that
is instrumental to the Chinese Communist Party or whether they're a bunch of incompetent
students who weren't even really doctors who can't even spell the doctor's name right on
their box. And so I asked Professor Farahont, is all of this technology BS? Are those neuroscientists
right who say that it's kind of like trying to listen to individual conversations standing outside
of a stadium? And what she told me is that initially the data might have
seemed kind of worthless.
It was always going to be way noisier
than the kind of data you get
from a device like neuralink
that goes directly inside of your head.
But she says that because of the rise of AI,
some of the data that BrainCo collects
may increasingly become discernible.
All of the noise can become signal.
And that's because of AI from companies like Deepseek,
which we should remember is another one
of China's Little Dragons
located right next to Brainco and Unitary.
We should plan a trip.
Yeah.
And in Professor Farahani's mind,
Brainco probably isn't duping China.
Because no matter how well it works, she says,
it's going to still be a useful tool for an authoritarian regime.
So let's take that world where it collects nothing.
It's already incredibly oppressive, right?
Then you go to the other extreme of, like,
let's assume a science fiction scenario
where like literally everything you're thinking could be decoded.
And to be clear, it cannot be from a wearable headset like this.
And it's hard to imagine that it ever would be.
But there's enough that could be collected where you can do things to prime people in settings
like that with information that you can then extract from their brain signals.
You know, show them communist imaging, see how they respond to it.
Figure out if, you know, their reaction is starting to be, you know,
you know, likelihood of demonstrating by rising up because their anger levels are starting to increase.
So as a tool of oppression against already oppressed minorities, it doesn't surprise me.
This seems like the, you know, most powerful kind of oppression that you could do and not have to physically harm somebody.
And by the way, it is worth noting.
Remember those images of BrainCo being used in Chinese schools and how they got all that backlash,
and kind of walked away from it.
Well, Brainco didn't actually stop doing that.
Our reporter found a Chinese government contract from 2023,
and it showed that the CCP had tapped BrainCo
to supply its headbands not just to any school,
but to a special education school in a region called Ning Sha Hui.
Ning Sha, for listeners who haven't heard of this place,
has surveillance cameras above mosque doors.
Religious lessons for children are banned.
Worshippers have to swipe government-issued cards to enter their places of prayer.
Their movements are logged.
Their identities are confirmed by facial recognition.
And Brainco, it seems, is part of that surveillance toolkit.
Which is to say that, you know, this isn't actually like the whoop wearable device that lots of people have now.
Or the aura ring or anything else.
It's something more disturbing.
For an athlete, I think it's easy to think, especially an elite athlete, you hear a lot in any privacy context, somebody saying, well, I don't really care about my privacy because I personally am insulated from the harms of it.
And first of all, that's not true for the individual.
But second, we also have to start to think about the group of facts.
Like, what does it do to sports?
What is it due to competitive sports?
And, you know, more societally focused implications, what if your data is taken and used to discriminate
against somebody else, which is how it happens.
And so this idea of like, well, it's not going to harm me.
And even if my data is used to harm other people, not my problem.
I think I'd say it is your problem.
It's all of our problem if we become complicit in a system that means that we give up data
willingly knowing that it could be used to harm other people.
The use cases and the misuse cases will just become more problematic.
But to be very clear about the use case that we started with, which is, you know, athletes and robots,
it does seem like the professor here does not dismiss that out of hand.
For the skeptics out there, I think it is very likely that the CCP is using brain data
to try to better understand how our athletes perform, to better train for future soldiers,
to become part of a overall program that they've been developing around cognitive warfare.
which means that BrainCoh might actually be training
you know like Chinese artificial intelligence
with Yonik Sinner's brainwaves.
Yep.
And if you're wondering here
whether Yonik's Center, until very recently,
the number one tennis player in the world,
responded to our request for comment.
The answer to that is no.
Same applies to his fellow former number one,
Igas Viantek,
as well as all-time number one,
Alpine skier, Michaela Schifrin,
who also trains with Dr. Chekcarelli.
But I did get to ask one more question
of the NFL player who picked off Peyton Manning
and Aaron Rogers and Tom Brady.
What's it going to be like
when the Chinese military has an army of Logan Ryans?
If they have a Logan Ryan robot come out,
they're going to be making some quick decisions,
some smart decisions out there, I'll tell you that.
And so they'll be tough to beat, man.
I was pretty sound in my mind.
back there in a football perspective.
So they'll be safe and sound in the middle of the field
and figure out how to...
We just don't put no Tom Brady's out.
Logan, Ryan, got the best one time.
And I just want to put a pin in that taunt from Logan Ryan
for just one more second here,
because it does bring us to the end of an episode
that connects to a number of topics
that we've been recently investigating on this show.
From Harvard to sports washing,
to insane athlete endorsement,
deals to billion-dollar startups.
But this particular story is about something so big because this story is about how our most
personal and sensitive and valuable data is being compromised so often.
And we don't even know it because the norms have already been set and sold by a foreign
adversary with our cooperation.
to enable it.
But the thing I found out today at the end, after all of this,
after all the super soldiers and neural surveillance
in China using American technology against America
in a global brain race,
is I think just a recipe for trash talk of the future.
Yeah, you know, the robot that stole my brainwaves
is going to kick the ass of the robot that stole your brainwaves.
It's a weird time, Pub.
Just a bit of futuristic spice
at the end of a very media.
episode. Ending with a real kick. Just, just like a good Carbonara. A wise man might say.
This has been Pablo Torre finds out a Metal Arc Media production. And I'll talk to you next time.
