Swedes are getting implants in their hands to replace cash, credit cards
By Lee Brown
July 14, 2019 | 11:13pm | Updated
A man receives his implanted microchip in Stockholm, Sweden.
AFP/Getty Images
Thousands of people in Sweden are having futuristic microchips implanted into their skin to carry out everyday activities and replace credit cards and cash.
More than 4,000 people have already had the sci-fi-ish chips, about the size of a grain of rice, inserted into their hands with the pioneers predicting millions will soon join them as they hope to take it global. Its very Black Mirror, Swedish scientist Ben Libberton told The Post of the similarity to the TV series highlighting futuristic scenarios.
Like glorified smartwatches, the chips help Swedes monitor their health and even replace keycards to allow them to enter offices and buildings. They have particularly caught on, however, by enabling owners to pay in stores with a simple swipe of the hand, a big deal in a forward-looking country that is moving toward eliminating cash.
The microchips were pioneered by former body piercer Jowan Österlund, who calls the technology a moonshot and who told Fortune magazine that hes been hit up by hopeful investors on every continent except Antarctica.
Tech will move into the body, the Biohax International founder told the mag. I am sure of that.
Österlund insists the technology is safe but that has not stopped alarm bells from ringing, with some fearing a link to a doubling in cybercrime in the country over the last decade.
Libberton, a British scientist based in Sweden, praised the definitely exciting potential health benefits of accurate health metrics taken from inside the body.
Think if the Apple Watch could measure things like blood glucose, he told The Post.
But he also fears the mass of highly personalized data and how it could be used.
The problem is, who owns this data? he asked. Do I get a letter from my insurance company saying premiums are going up before I know Im ill? If I use the chip to buy lunch, go to the gym and go to work, will someone have all of this info about me? Is this stored and is it safe? Libberton added, Its not just about the chip, but integration with other systems and data sharing.
And he fears Swedes are not giving enough thought to the potential dangers.
People have shown theyre happy to give up privacy for convenience, he said. The chip is very convenient, so could we accept our data being shared very widely before we know the risks?
The trend coincides with Swedens march toward going cashless, with notes and coins making up just 1 percent of Swedens economy. At the same time, the country has seen a dramatic decrease in some crimes with just two bank robberies last year compared to 110 in 2008.
Poster Comment:
The Mark of the Beast has arrived in Sweden. Why has nobody noticed this?