MIT Media Lab
MIT Media Lab (mm=33) is a project of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, used in the Science Church and development of internet and Artificial Intelligence as part of the transhumanist agenda. It was founded in 1985 in Cambridge Massachusetts by Nicholas Negroponte and Jerome Wiesner (APS). Wiesner worked at MIT Radiation Lab and Los Alamos National Laboratory (Manhattan Project) and was president of MIT from 1971 to 1980. |
![]() |
He was a friend of Pete Seeger (worked with Harry Hay of the OTO) and member of the Science Advisory Committee with Hans Bethe. He played a role in the DDT pesticide media ritual with Rachel Carlson (worked with sister of Benjamin Spock) and was scientific advisor to JFK (the Kennedys, like the Disney's worked with the nazi's of Operation Paperclip to develop NASA).
Nicholas Negroponte was trained at elite schools Buckley School (Franklin Roosevelt Jr, Donald Trump Jr, David Rockefeller), Fay School (Peter Fonda), Choate Rosemary Hall and Le Rosey. His brother John Negroponte was educated at Buckley School, Philips Exeter, Director of National Intelligence under George W Bush (S&B) and married Diana Villiers (Order of St John).
It had its origins in MIT School of Architecture and Planning, which played a role in implementing program Modernism. Norbert Wiener of MIT developed cybernetics, which was discussed at the Macy Conferences and influenced Dianetics of Ron Hubbard (Scientology, Babalon Workings). Vannevar Bush used the staff of Manhattan Project to work in Project Artichoke.
It received 45 million funding. Its building was designed by I.M. Pei who designed the pyramid of the Louvre (one eye pyramid symbolism in The Da Vinci Code).
It did research on human-computer interfaces (similar to research of Stanford Research International), neurobiology, bio-engineering (merging of humans with machines), personalized electronic newspaper, social networking (used in Harvard project Facebook), wireless networking, field sensing, motion capturing (Gollum, creating a Golem), rhythm based video games (Media Lab students created Harmonix, company of Guitar Hero and Rock Band, sold to Mtv). Tad Machover created Hyperinstruments and worked with Peter Gabriel. Electronic ink is used by Amazon Kindle.
It created Sixth Sense, a program that reacts on arm movements and LEGO MindStorms, in alliance with Danish company LEGO (idea of Seymour Papert who worked with Marvin Minsky).
It developed Alter Ego (MPD), a device that translates brain impulses into words on a computer.
In 1993 Negroponte invested in Wired magazine (hq in San Francisco of the Franciscans) of Luis Rossetto and Kevin Kelly, published by Condé Nast Publications of jesuit Condé Nast. Rossetto published Electric World to promote Marvin Minsky, Timothy Leary and Negroponte. Kevin Kelly worked for Whole Earth Catalog of Stewart Brand (Merry Pranksters with MK Ultra linked Ken Kesey) and started virtual community The WELL (manipulation of water energy) with Brand, Larry Brilliant (WHO) and Scott Rosenberg (Salon.com, SanFrancisco Examiner, previously owned by Hearst). The WELL was acquired by Salon.com of David Talbot (disinfo about the JFK ritual in The Devil's Chessboard). Kevin Kelly was advisor on Steven Spielberg's Minority Report with Scientologist Tom Cruise and Colin Farrell, based on a novel of Philip K Dick. Wired published contributions of John Perry Barlow (CIA band Grateful Dead, Mormon Church).
In 2000 UC Berkeley and UC San Diego created California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology. It created the Einstein Robot (Dr Know in Spielberg's movie A.I. with Haley Joel Osment, who played in The Sixth Sense).
Jonah Perretti co-founded the Huffington Post with Arianna Huffington (dated Werner Erhard-Rosenberg) and Andrew Breitbart (Breitbart News) and founded BuzzFeed, which funded Andreessen-Horowitz of the son of David Horowitz.
In 2005 Negroponte started One Laptop Per Child Initiative with Seymour Papert (St John's College Cambridge), providing laptops in Nigeria and India, funded by Google and News Corporation of Rupert Murdoch. He invested in Skype and was on the board of Motorola and TTI/Vanguard (with John Perry Barlow).
Walter Bender developed Sugar for digital mind control of children.
Frank Moss worked for Mayo Clinic (MC: Mind Control) Center for Innovation and Tivoli Systems of IBM.
Joi Ito had jesuit trained Timothy Leary (LSD experiments at Harvard) as godfather. He was one of the Global Leaders of Tomorrow of the World Economic Forum.
His sister Mizuko Ito married Scott Fisher, who also worked for NASA's Ames Research Center, Media Lab and as professor at University of Southern California. He worked on Augmented Reality, Virtual Reality and with Walter Bender he worked on the Aspen Movie Map, funded by ARPA (concept of Google Street View).
Andrew Huang (Zeta Beta Tau) and Edward Snowden (NSA, Wikileaks of Julian Assange) participated in a MIT Medialab event called Forbidden Research.
In 2019 it played a role in the Jeffrey Epstein media ritual with Mia Villiers Farrow's son Ronan Farrow, leading to the resignation of Joi Ito and Ethan Zuckerman.
Director Dava Newman worked for NASA.
Flavia Sparacino founded Sensing Places Interactive and worked on wearable computers and sensors (technology of Google Glass) and for the Museum of Modern Art (in its early period funded by the Rosenbergs). She was promoted by Discovery Channel. She was influenced by Glorianna Davenport who did research on interactive cinema.
Mark Sparacino worked for Chaturbate (the porn industry) of Jason Fisher (trained at Barry University of the Dominicans).