Why Second Sight Shut Down The Human Cost Behind the Bionic Eye's Collapse

🦾 Part 4: Pixels Fade – The Painful Closure of Second Sight

πŸ“ SaatPro Science Diaries – Pixels of Hope Series

β€œWe didn’t just lose vision again.
We lost the people who promised to stand with us in the dark.”
β€” David, Argus II user after company shutdown


Scene 1: When the Lights Went Out Again

It began with rumors. Missed emails. Cancelled appointments.
Then one day in 2020, a woman in New Jersey called the helpline for her Argus II device β€” the implant that helped her β€œsee” her grandson.

The number rang endlessly.
No response. No service.

Across the country, similar stories unfolded. People relying on a system inside their eyes suddenly realized… the company behind it had quietly disappeared.

Second Sight Medical Products, the very team that gave people a chance to see again, had halted operations.

And with it, the future dimmed.


Scene 2: Silicon Promises, Human Consequences

At the time, Second Sight was facing financial collapse.
Their vision for the next-gen system, Orion (a brain implant), remained stuck in the testing phase. Investors backed out. Clinical trials paused. COVID hit. Layoffs swept the company.

They couldn’t sustain operations.

But this wasn’t a software startup folding quietly.
This was a company with real patients β€” 350 people, walking around with implants in their skulls and eyes, now suddenly unsupported.

No service. No repairs. No software updates.
Just silence.

And if a device malfunctioned?

There was no one left to fix it.


Scene 3: A Second Loss

Rick, one of the earliest recipients of the Argus II, described it like this:

β€œThe first time I went blind, it was biology.
The second time? It was a business decision.”

It wasn’t just the pixels that faded. It was the trust.

People had risked surgeries, emotional trauma, social adjustment β€” all for a promise of a technological future. And then, the rug was pulled.

It felt like being abandoned in the dark… again.


Scene 4: Not a Failure β€” A Foundation

But here’s where we pause.

Despite the heartbreak, Second Sight did not fail.

It was the first company in history to put a working bionic eye on the market.
It showed what’s possible. It inspired a dozen startups. It made the world believe that science could bring light to blindness.

Yes, the system was crude.
Yes, the company shut down.
But the vision lived on.

Engineers who worked there now lead teams in AI vision. Former researchers moved on to cortical implant research. Patients formed support groups. Advocates raised awareness.

Argus II may have dimmed,
But the spark it lit β€” that spark of human-machine hope β€” is still alive.


πŸ’¬ Coming up next in Part 5: β€œLegacy Code – What Argus II Left Behind” – How a discontinued device is still inspiring new generations of scientists, technologists, and dreamers.

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