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Topic: Is there a microchip implant in your future? - page 2. (Read 2195 times)

newbie
Activity: 20
Merit: 0
September 04, 2014, 09:12:04 AM
#19
No. Its one of the signs of the times. I dont want to do that.
newbie
Activity: 20
Merit: 0
September 04, 2014, 09:03:08 AM
#18
My mom believes its the sign of the beast
newbie
Activity: 16
Merit: 0
September 04, 2014, 09:02:35 AM
#17
I expect worried parents will place tracker chips of various kinds in their kids. That will be among the first applications.

If its sold cheap that time I will surely buy for my kid.
newbie
Activity: 18
Merit: 0
September 04, 2014, 08:49:32 AM
#16
that will make me rich? Then yes!
legendary
Activity: 2002
Merit: 1016
September 04, 2014, 06:50:41 AM
#15
No thanks Smiley

In some not-so-distant dystopian future they'll eventually make implants compulsory at birth, imagine they'll be an underground chip-removal-service for people wanted to get off 'the grid.'
full member
Activity: 210
Merit: 100
★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice
September 04, 2014, 04:40:04 AM
#14
If there is a microchip implant tomorrow and it goes for a cent. I still would prefer life as it is planned,speculative and private. Because i enjoy life the way its now and forever, i love privacy.
legendary
Activity: 2660
Merit: 1074
September 03, 2014, 11:20:48 PM
#13
Them just EMP and erase all people's identities. It is not absurd hard make an EMP that migh destroy a single chip.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
September 03, 2014, 10:49:56 PM
#12
I expect worried parents will place tracker chips of various kinds in their kids. That will be among the first applications.
newbie
Activity: 34
Merit: 0
September 03, 2014, 10:03:17 AM
#11
If I were to choose between chip and cash. Id still prefer cash. I dont care if chip is more secure or what. I want to go old school.
legendary
Activity: 2436
Merit: 1561
I definitely expect to see such chips in action in future. But it's likely to be a voluntary process rather than government-forced.
The reason the gov wouldn't want to enforce that on everyone is they'd have to chip themselves and their families. Also if everyone is chipped, the common crime rates would likely to fall (detecting crime would be extremely fast and easy in most of cases), so the gov would struggle to justify high expenses on police force/ other 'security' agencies, meaning less power and less control over the people.
hero member
Activity: 1470
Merit: 504
When that day comes, I'll start selling Faraday clothing...
legendary
Activity: 2884
Merit: 1115
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
The population will do cost and benefit analysis of those implant and might decide the benefit outweigh the privacy concern.

Personally, if those chip can enhance my memory and intelligent many folds, I won't mind giving away part of my privacy.

It's an interesting proposition to say the least but if the chip could enhance my memory and intelligence I think that some of that new found knowledge would be used to ensure that my privacy is kept secured.

Although it does scare me that an argument is think of the children they should all be chipped at birth for these type of technologies, as it would not be a choice but a decision made by their parents at their birth.
hero member
Activity: 924
Merit: 1000
Of course there is, and I welcome it. There won't be any privacy left anyway once Internet reach is final stage, which will happen in this decade thanks to what is being done by not only corporations but even npos, and will bring us to be connected 24/7. Our real and cybernetic idendities will be indissoluble: to be, you will have to be on the Internet and be identifiable at all times.
This is not the same as saying I welcome a dystopian future, which I don't think is at all the case, even with all negative things we're seeing today, because there are much more good things happening, they just don't get as much coverage as bad things. Once automation will free us from unnecessary labour and professions (which our society is full of) and renewable energies will give us independence, we will see a huge leap in how we conceive humanity and the time we have. We really focus our existences on work and receiving rewards, but I think we're on the verge on another humanism/illuminism era. If you think I am too optimist, just take a look at how much things we're discovering these last 5 years and look at the rate research is growing, it's much more then just exponential. But we are just entering this transition time and it indeed could be really problematic mostly because our institutions and politics are still based on immutable paradigms which were ok 20/50 years ago, but now we need something much more dynamic.
full member
Activity: 138
Merit: 100
The is no ownership or possession in the universe.

You think you stand free of everything around you? independent, and unconnected?

You ARE connected, to everything around you, whether you realize it or not.

They "own" you, but you "own" IT, and IT will all reach equilibrium soon.
legendary
Activity: 1134
Merit: 1002
You cannot kill love
The is no ownership or possession in the universe.
full member
Activity: 138
Merit: 100
You can increase your own awareness and intellect through psychedelic experiences and mediation.

Friendly advice, hope you take it:  If you will to take the chip, you are fucked.  I'd take death over the mark any day.

Dank,

You, me, and every man in time has borne the mark since birth into this world.

All that exists now is the time before you are claimed, called back by your rightful owners.
legendary
Activity: 1134
Merit: 1002
You cannot kill love
You can increase your own awareness and intellect through psychedelic experiences and mediation.

Friendly advice, hope you take it:  If you will to take the chip, you are fucked.  I'd take death over the mark any day.
full member
Activity: 174
Merit: 100
The population will do cost and benefit analysis of those implant and might decide the benefit outweigh the privacy concern.

Personally, if those chip can enhance my memory and intelligent many folds, I won't mind giving away part of my privacy.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon


You can inject one under your skin and no one will ever notice. Using short-range radio frequency identification (RFID) signals, it can transmit your identity as you pass through a security checkpoint or walk into a football stadium. It can help you buy groceries at Wal-Mart. In a worst-case scenario – if you are kidnapped in a foreign country, for example – it could save your life.

Microchip implants like the ones pet owners use to track their dogs and cats could become commonplace in humans in the next decade. Experts are divided on whether they’re appropriate for people, but the implants could offer several advantages. For soldiers and journalists in war zones, an implant could be the difference between life and death. A tracker could also help law enforcement quickly locate a kidnapped child.

“In the long run, chip implants could make it less intrusive than some emerging ID systems which rely on physical biometrics (like your fingerprints or unique eye pattern),” says Alex Soojung-Kim Pang, author of the book “Distraction Addiction” and visiting scholar at Stanford's University’s Peace Innovation Lab.

“This should be a matter of individual choice, but fighting crime should be much easier using chips,” adds sci-fi author Larry Niven, who predicted chip implants in the ’70s. Niven said he supports chip implantation for security reasons, provided it is an opt-in measure.

Ramez Naam, who led the early development of Microsoft software projects and is now a popular speaker and author, said he envisions using chip implantation to help monitor the location of people with Alzheimer's disease.

They could be used to track the activities of felons who have been released from prison.

Chips are being used today to manage farm animals. Farmers can track sheep, pigs and horses as they move through a gate, weigh them instantly and make sure they are eating properly.

“Those same chips have found their way into RFID devices to activate the gas pump from a key ring and for anti-theft devices in cars,” said Stu Lipoff, an electrical engineer and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers spokesman.

“There have been people who volunteered to use them for opening the door of an apartment as a personalized ID using your arm. It could be used to track criminals targeted for patrol who might wander into a restricted area.”

Possible uses in the future

Implants are normally useful only at short ranges – as you walk through a portal or close to a transponder. So using chip implants to track people would require an infrastructure of transponders scattered around a city that read their identity in public buildings and street corners, Lipoff said.

But consider the possibilities:  People could unlock their homes or cars, gain access to a building, pass through an airport and even unlock their laptops without using a phone or watch. A pin code could be used to activate the chip – or to deactivate it to maintain privacy.

They are easy to install and remove, and, because they are implanted under the skin, they are unobtrusive. The chips, which could be the size of a thumbnail, could be injected into an arm or a hand.

If children were chipped, teachers could take attendance in the classroom. Lipoff said that GPS would not work because skin would block the signal, although new Near Field Communication chips like those in current smartphones could work because of their low-power requirement. However, no-one has yet tried to implant NFC chips.

Police could track cars and read data without needing to scan license plates. At a hospital, administrators could locate a doctor without having to rely on a pager. And if you walked into a donut shop, the owner could read your taste preferences (glazed or not glazed) without needing a loyalty card.

But is it ethical?

Like any tech advancement, there are downsides. Concerns about the wrong people accessing personal information and tracking you via the chips have swirled since the FDA approved the first implantable microchip in 2004.

Naam and Pang both cited potential abuses, from hacking into the infrastructure and stealing your identity to invading your privacy and knowing your driving habits. There are questions about how long a felon would have to use a tracking implant. And, an implant, which has to be small and not use battery power -- might not be as secure as a heavily encrypted smartphone.

Troy Dunn, who attempts to locate missing persons on his TNT show “APB with Troy Dunn,” said a chip implant would make his job easier, but he is strongly against the practice for most people. “I only support GPS chip monitoring for convicted felons while in prison and on parole; for sex offenders forever; and for children if parents opt in,” he says. “I am adamantly against the chipping of anyone else.”

Using chip implants to locate abducted children could actually have the opposite effect. Pang says a microchip would make a missing person easier to rescue, but “Kidnappers want ransoms, not dead bodies. The most dangerous time for victims is during rescue attempts or when the kidnappers think the police are closing in.”

And beyond the obvious privacy issues, there’s something strange about injecting a chip in your body, Lipoff says. Yet pacemakers and other embedded devices are commonly used today. “People might find it a bit unsavory, but if it is not used to track you, and apart from the privacy issues, there are many interesting applications,” he says.

At least it’s better than having a barcode stitched onto our foreheads.

http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2014/08/30/is-there-microchip-implant-in-your-future/

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