Workers at Swedish office complex Epicenter have had microchips implanted in their hands in order to operate the building’s facilities. The chip allows staff to open security doors, pay for lunch in the cafeteria, and even operate the photocopier.
The embedded chips, around the size of a grain of rice, carry RFID (radio frequency identification), each with its own unique ID.
Felicio de Costa, a manager at the office complex, told the BBC, “We already interact with technology all the time. Today it’s a bit messy – we need pin codes and passwords. Wouldn’t it be easy to just touch with your hand? That’s really intuitive.”
Hannes Sjoblad of the Swedish Biohacking Group say that this trial of the technology is designed to prepare us for a future of biotech implants, saying, “We want to be able to understand this technology before big corporates and big government come to us and say everyone should get chipped – the tax authority chip, the Google or Facebook chip.”
Source: BBC
Ceres 300 TG ARGB Snow Mid Tower Chassis is an ATX case that comes with…
ASUS Prime series motherboards are expertly engineered to unleash the full potential of 12th Generation…
Say hello to Raptor-Lake. Intel's incredible 13th generation processors are here to break the boundaries…
This PG34WQ15R2B Phantom Gaming monitor provides exceptional clarity to any gamer thanks to its WQHD…
CORSAIR VENGEANCE DDR5, optimized for Intel® motherboards, delivers the higher frequencies and greater capacities of…
Leap into the future with the ROG Strix B760-F, a fantastic upgrade into 13th Gen…