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Microchips Under the Skin Offer ID, Raise Questions

George Spellwin

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WIRE: 12/20/2001 5:38 pm ET

Microchips Under the Skin Offer ID, Raise Questions

By Kevin Krolicki
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Picture a chip the size of a grain of rice that can be injected into your body and give detailed information about you to anyone with the right scanning equipment.

A scene from a bad science fiction film? A radical research project in some secret government laboratory?

The chip is neither fiction nor obscure science, but a soon-to-be-marketed product ready to make its way to customers in the year ahead.

The use of high-powered chips melded to the body has been a recurrent theme of sci-fi from the 1984 cyberpunk novel "Neuromancer" to the 1999 blockbuster film "The Matrix," but the announcement of a commercial-ready product by Applied Digital Solutions this week will focus real-world attention on the potential and risks of such technology, experts said.

Designed to store critical personal medical data, the chip could mark the start of a more urgent debate about potential privacy invasions at a time when privacy advocates are on the defensive over anti-terror initiatives after Sept. 11.

"It's certainly going to raise issues that we haven't dealt with before," said Stephen Keating, executive director of the Denver-based Privacy Foundation.

Such radio-activated chips are already used to track cattle, house pets and salmon.

But this would mark the first attempt to apply the technology to human beings, offering a potentially controversial means for hospitals to "scan" patients in emergency rooms and for governments to pick out convicted criminals.

Applied Digital said Wednesday it would begin marketing its implantable VeriChip in South America and Europe, initially as a means to convey information about medical devices to doctors who need a quick way to find out how and where patients with pacemakers, artificial joints and other surgically implanted devices have been treated.

When activated by a radio scanner, the chip would emit a radio signal of its own from under the skin that would transmit stored data to a nearby Internet-equipped computer or via the telephone, the company said.

The chip itself could be implanted in a doctor's office with a local anesthesia and the site of the injection could be closed without stitches, it said.

But the company already has its sights on more ambitious applications for the chips, which are currently capable of carrying the equivalent of about 6 lines of text. Future versions could emit a tracking beacon or serve as a form of personal identification, an executive said.

"There are enough benefits that outweigh the concerns people have about privacy," said Applied Digital Chairman and Chief Executive Richard Sullivan.

Other experts remain skeptical, citing immediate practical problems, such as the need to set standards that would make such chips more universally readable, and longer-term concerns over civil liberties.

Even so, such implants are certain to become more widespread, said technology forecaster Paul Saffo.

"Of course, we will do this," said Saffo of the Silicon Valley-based Institute for the Future "And it won't be just for the functionality. It will also be for fashion. You've got a generation that's already piercing themselves. Of course, they're going to put electronics under their skin."

TOUCHED BY A DIGITAL ANGEL

Applied Digital, which has a $95-million market value and has been scarcely followed on Wall Street, plans to file an application with the Food and Drug Administration in January to market the chip in the United States, a process that could take another year to 18 months, Sullivan said.

The Federal Communications Commission has already licensed the chip's use of radio frequencies because of an existing version used to track runaway pets, said Sullivan.

The Palm Beach, Fla.-based company is just coming through a two-year-long restructuring, reorganizing a far-flung telecommunications business around a patent it acquired in December 1999 for a transmitter that could be implanted in the body and powered by muscle movements.

The first related commercial application was a remote-monitoring device called Digital Angel, introduced at the end of November, which combines a wristwatch-like sensor linked to a wireless transmitter and a global positioning system.

The device can transmit information on body temperature, pulse and location and has been sold as a way to track Alzheimer's patients and children who might wander from home.

The company has also won a three-year trial contract with California to supply a version of the product that would track paroled prisoners in Los Angeles and alert authorities when they had violated the terms of their parole by leaving a set area.

Sales of the new implanted chip could total $2.5 million to $5 million in 2002, Sullivan estimated, a small fraction of a potential market the company has projected could be worth $70 billion or more.

Wall Street is excited about the chip. Applied Digital, which saw its stock rise 18% to 45 cents on the Nasdaq on its initial product announcement on Wednesday, is in talks with major pacemaker manufacturers about a joint-marketing plan that would see the VeriChip implanted at the same time as the heart-regulating devices, he said.

Some see new opportunities for high-tech security after the hijacking attacks on New York and the Pentagon killed nearly 3,300 on Sept. 11. The attacks brought new support for the use of such technology by government and more interest in its future commercial applications, Sullivan said.

"People are becoming less concerned about what information is out there," he said.

Erwin Chemerinsky, a civil rights expert and law professor at the University of Southern California, conceded that the public mood has shifted, but said:

"It all depends on how this is used ... when the government is invading the body there are always special privacy concerns."

"This is rightly going to prompt debate, as you can imagine, but the good news is that we'll have years to figure it out," said futurist Saffo.


Copyright 2001 Reuters News Service. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
 
I have one of those. The damn government put it in me while I was sleeping, and now they track my every move. Sometimes when I want to get away I wear tin foil under my clothes so they can't track me; it works well. I know why they did it too, they want to find out what I know about aliens, but I'll never tell.
 
Great, conspiracy theory come to life.....I know Oracle offered to give the technology for free to the gov. to institute the smart cards.......but this is getting ridiculous, and the sad thing is, Americans as a people have in less than 100yrs, gotten to complacent and take freedom for granted.....our way has become to much "protection of the weak" and not enough allowance of natural selection.....I'm not all for the strong survive, but in this day and age the point is to neuter the strong and coddle the weak, creating just that, a weak ass society that can't remember how and why this country is what is is.

But then again, what can we expect, when politics has become a career and and intrafamily job.....should be like it was in the beginning....do your term of office, and go back to working on the farm.

just my .02
 
This is scarily sad... i wish they would just invent that protein chip...so i wuould not have to strugle to get it all in each day:D
 
Polfa/Jelfa said:
This is scarily sad... i wish they would just invent that protein chip...so i wuould not have to strugle to get it all in each day:D


mmmmmmm.... protein chips... :p

lol...

YUM
 
Screw that nonsense, I dont trust anyone to put anything with a comp chip in my damn body. Next thing I know Ill wake up in the middle of a trance and find myself making a check out to bill gates, no thank! :)
 
The sick part is.. these chips could be inserted with a simple shot.. so think about that the next time you let someone other than you stick a needle in your skin.
 
George Orwell would be proud...

Big brother is watching. Another example of this type of civil liberties invasion is a security system installed in Washington D.C. that uses digital video cameras to scan the faces of people on the streets and compare them with a DB of known terrorists. Unfortunately it has a very high failure rate...it was also installed at the Winter Olympics, but a malfunction led the IOC to discontinue its use.

Seriously scary stuff. Know your rights.

Pebcak
 
George,

This type of tracking is nothing new. The question is - who will benefit from it? About 15 years ago there was a debate over tattooing babies with a small mark - usually on the heel of the foot. This was supposed to aid in curbing child abductions. Sorry, are they going to go running around pulling off children’s socks and shoes playing 'match the tattoo'? Silly, but highly suggested.

Micro information applications are already widely used. Next time you are at a pet store, ask them about the new pet chips you can have implanted so if your pet is lost and returned to a shelter, it can be identified and returned to you. Same thing goes with your ATM card, grocery shopper reward card, online accounts and telephone charges. All this information can be obtained by people with less than good intentions. A year ago several companies that were doing 'target tracking' using peoples grocery reward cards [saver cards] sold information to third parties and made a fortune. Everything you buy using one of these cards can be tracked.

Sounds like a fairy tale? Here in SoCal we have meth labs. Lots of them. Until about a year ago a majority of them use cookers that were hooked up to home appliances - stoves, ranges, ovens etc. The normal electric bill [since gas appliances are rare] for a home is about $150.00 per month. When the electric company sees a home that is using more than $500.00 a month for an extended period of time they notify the authorities. In every case, it has turned out to be either a meth lab or hydroponics.

The Smart Chip concept is already being used in some countries to monitor criminals. Rather than use the ankle bracelets that can easily be fooled, the chips can only be tricked if it is exposed to a large [not deadly, but enough to knock you on your ass] jolt of electricity. This fries the chip and ends transmission. By the time anyone responds to it you could have gone out, committed a crime and returned home. The Smart Chip is offered to non-violent criminals who have been offered a reduced charge in exchange for being a guinea pig. The usual side effects - infection, misplacement during implantation and having to have it removed when the probation period is over - usually though scar tissue that has formed over it. No one mentioned that there is a slight - very slight - risk of death if it is implanted the wrong way. Depending on the size, it could hit a vein .. and after that... it's pretty much bye-bye birdie.

So as far-fetched as this might all seem.... it is in the future. If people don't wake up and start thinking about their rights, eventually they will not have any. There was a huge debate over implanting these in children to aid in recover if an abduction takes place - if this was done to you as a child - how pissed would you be when you turned 20 or 30 and realized that for the better part of your youth you were tracked and your location was recorded.
 
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