The Asian Age

Microchips get under the skin of technophil­e Swedes

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Stockholm, May 13: It’s the size of a grain of rice but could hold the key to many aspects of your life.

A tiny microchip inserted under the skin can replace the need to carry keys, credit cards and train tickets.

That might sound like an Orwellian nightmare to some but in Sweden it is a welcome reality for a growing number who favours convenienc­e over concerns of potential personal data violations.

The small implants were first used in 2015 in Sweden — initially confidenti­ally — and several other countries.

Swedes have gone on to be very active in microchipp­ing, with scant debate about issues surroundin­g its use, in a country keen on new technology and where the sharing of personal informatio­n is held up as a sign of a transparen­t society.

Twenty- eight year- old Ulrika Celsing is one of 3,000 Swedes to have injected a microchip into her hand to try out a new way of life.

To enter her workplace, the media agency Mindshare, she simply waves her hand on a small box and types in a code before the doors open.

“It was fun to try something new and to see what one could use it for to make life easier in the future,” she told AFP.

In the past year, the chip has turned into a kind of electronic handbag and has even replaced her gym card, she said.

If she wanted to, she could also use it to book train tickets.

Sweden’s SJ national railway company has won over some 130 users to its microchip reservatio­n service in a year.

Conductors scan passengers’ hands after they book tickets online and register them on their chip.

Informatio­n sharing Sweden has a track record on the sharing of personal informatio­n, which may have helped ease the microchip's acceptance among the Nordic country's 10 million- strong population.

Citizens have long accepted the sharing of their personal details, registered by the social security system, with other administra­tive bodies, while people can find out each others' salaries through a quick phone call to the tax authority.

The implants use Near Field Communicat­ion ( NFC) technology, also used in credit cards, and are “passive”, which means they hold data that can be read by other devices but cannot read informatio­n themselves.

Although still small, they have the capacity to hold train tickets, entry pass codes as well as access certain vending machines and printers, promoters say.

Might need to re- think When Celsing's innovative­ly minded media company organised an event where employees could get the implants, she followed the crowd.

She said she felt nothing but a slight sting when the syringe inserted the chip into her left hand, which she now uses on an almost daily basis and does not fear hacking or possible surveillan­ce.

“I don't think our current technology is enough to get chip hacked,” she says.

“But I may think about this again in the future. I could always take it out then,” she adds.

However, for Ben Libberton, a microbiolo­gist working for MAX IV Laboratory in the southern city of Lund which provides X- rays for research, the danger is real.

The chip implants could cause “infections or reactions of the immune system”, he warned.

But the biggest risk, he added, was around the data contained in the chip.

“At the moment, the data collected and shared by implants is small, but it's likely that this will increase,” the researcher said.

 ?? — AFP ?? Hannes Sjöblad, chief disruption officer at Epicenter, Stockholm’s first digital House of Innovation speaks during a chip implant event on January 18. An electronic implant inserted under the skin to replace keys, business cards and train tickets: in...
— AFP Hannes Sjöblad, chief disruption officer at Epicenter, Stockholm’s first digital House of Innovation speaks during a chip implant event on January 18. An electronic implant inserted under the skin to replace keys, business cards and train tickets: in...

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