Microchip implants raise concerns about health, privacy
Tech has been in use in Sweden for three years— and for even longer by pet owners in U. S.
First artificial hips and titanium knees. Next, embeddable microchips?
A small Wisconsin company plans to implant tiny microchips in 50 employees’ hands starting Aug. 1, raising questions about health and privacy risks and conjuring images of man- machine pairings straight out of a science- fiction blockbuster.
The sales pitch is that workers no longer will have to swipe badges to open doors or bother with security logins at their PCs. The chip reader will do the work instead.
As crazy as that sounded to many, the technology has been used on humans for three years in Sweden — and longer in pets whose owners are worried about losing them.
The experience gives limited insight into the concerns around implanted microchips: That embedding a small device that communicates with other electronics poses a health risk — and brings us a big cyborg step closer to a surveillance state.
The Food and Drug Administration approved a Radio Frequency Identification chip for implant in 2004 as a way to relay medical information quickly to doctors. More recently, in 2014, the FDA said that while it was not aware of any adverse events associated with having an RFID chip in your body, the government agency said it was studying to address “concerns” about the potential effects of RIFD chips “on medical devices,” such as pacemakers and defibrillators.
The FDA has a section of its website where it encourages individuals to report issues.
A bunch of humans have already tried it out: Around 3,000 Sweden residents are walking around with microchips in their hands. The company Biohax International started selling the chips and their installation at tech fairs in Sweden in 2015 and just snagged the national rail company, SJ, as a client.
In June, Swedish rail conductors started scanning the hands of passengers. The lure: no paper tickets and no electronic tickets on a smartphone that could lose batteries.
The Swedish government hasn’t approved the sale of the chips nor “have they disapproved it,” says Biohax CEO Jowan Österlund. “There has been no national legislation.”
Österlund insists the chip implant, which takes less than two minutes, “is safer than a piercing, as dangerous as getting your blood taken at the hospital.”
The Swedish microchip experiment is just getting under way. But a furry group of scientific pioneers have been wearing these chips for years.
The RFID chips used in Sweden and by Wisconsin firm Three Square Market are similar to the embeddable pet IDs that have been implanted in cats and dogs since the early 2000s as a way of identifying the animals. They are primarily sold and installed by veterinarians.
According to the American Veterinary Medical Foundation, chipping your pet leads to an “increased chance of reunification of lost or stolen animals with their owners.”
The foundation says it’s safe, if installed properly, but it has also reported issues such as cats and dogs suffering from weakness in all four limbs due to improper placement of the chip. Website Chipmenot. com is a forum for pet owners who blame chips for their animal’s deaths, citing cancer, lymphoma, blood loss and spinal cord injuries.
Aside from questions about health risks, the idea of implanting a device that could track you spooks people.
The RFID chips, as envisioned by Biohax, aren’t intended to track your whereabouts, and Biohax says its chip, in its current form, couldn’t include a GPS tracker in the same size.
But GPS tracking doesn’t seem like a far reach from identification technology.
A Nevada lawmaker recently introduced legislation that would ban RFID chips in humans. State Sen. Becky Harris, a Republican, said she had ethical concerns.
“There’s no cryptology or protection measures that we’re aware of that are placed on these chips, so it’s possible to hack the information contained within the chips,” she said. “It is possible that you could harass or stalk chipped individuals with the right type of reader.”