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Blog Wisconsin company offers chip implant to employees
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  • Author Author: Catwell
  • Date Created: 31 Jul 2017 5:49 PM Date Created
  • Views 1745 views
  • Likes 2 likes
  • Comments 13 comments
  • impant
  • 1984
  • hmi
  • chip
  • password
  • cabeatwell
  • Big Brother
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Wisconsin company offers chip implant to employees

Catwell
Catwell
31 Jul 2017

image

Wisconsin’s Three Square Market gives employees the option to get chip implanted that opens doors, pays for break room food, provides computer access, and more Convenient or the start of Big Brother watching? (Photo via Circa)

 

Passwords and keys have keep your information and important items secure, but considering how many we have to remember on a daily basis, it can be a hassle. Did you forget your work sign-in or left your keys at home? It’s a headache. But have you ever thought of resolving this problem with an implant? Sounds like something out of a sci-fi novel, but it’s something Wisconsin’s Three Square Market is currently giving their employees. This makes them the first company in the US to offer such implants.

 

The implant, which is optional to receive, is a rice-sized implant that takes care of authentication for just about everything in the office. Tasks like PC sign-ins, buying food in the break room, and unlocking the front door are all taken care of by the implant. So where is the implant placed? It’s inserted under the skin between your thumb and index finger. And apparently, it’s been FDA approved.

 

Convenient, yes, but it brings up plenty of questions with the biggest one being privacy and tracking issues. The company assures there’s no GPS tracking, and all your information is encrypted. And if you change your mind about the chip, it can be removed at any time. It may give you shudders, but the company’s employees seem pretty excited about it. So far, more than half of their 85 employees have agreed to get the chip implant. The company is evening holding a “party” when a company from Sweden, Biohax International, will come and install the chips, also known as radio frequency identification (RFID) transponders.

 

It sounds slightly creepy, but other companies may be picking up on the idea sooner than you think. Three Square Market has already heard from other firms in other business sectors that want to know how they can implement similar chips for their employees. But when you think about it, are we really that far off from chip implants? Many people’s fingerprints are on file to unlock their phones. There’s even a similar option for smart cars. And with apps like Apple Pay and Samsung Wallet, there’s no need to take out your credit card or cash at the store.

 

Fact is, we already offer up plenty of our information to our smart devices and daily apps. Is getting a chip implant any different? Either way, it’s still an unsettling thought. And there are still flaws the Wisconsin company has to take into consideration. Because the implant is the key for company resources and sensitive information, it’s easy for the employee to be held against their will until they grant access with the wave of their hand. Is this really our future?

 

Have a story tip? Message me at: cabe(at)element14(dot)com

http://twitter.com/Cabe_Atwell

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Top Comments

  • e14phil
    e14phil over 7 years ago +3
    Catwell This ties into my ongoing series discussing my own NFC chip, clarifying that no I cannot be tracked. Other posts are here: Life as a Cyborg - Day 0 - Implantation Life as a Cyborg - Day 1 - First…
  • rsc
    rsc over 7 years ago +2
    I can imagine the "Upgrade" procedure.....
  • jc2048
    jc2048 over 7 years ago +2
    it’s easy for the employee to be held against their will until they grant access Wouldn't a much more likely form of attack be to get the employee to innocently touch a (disguised) reader, with a phone…
  • e14phil
    e14phil over 7 years ago in reply to gadget.iom

    Very little, its just a single puncture, its like getting a rounded splinter, I didn't feel it after the second day. image

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  • gadget.iom
    gadget.iom over 7 years ago in reply to jc2048

    The next element14 project... A "gift" coffee mug with an RFID reader and wireless communication. image

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  • gadget.iom
    gadget.iom over 7 years ago in reply to e14phil

    Just out of curiosity, was there much swelling during the implant process? And what was the approximate recovery time?

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  • e14phil
    e14phil over 7 years ago in reply to gadget.iom

    The chip i currently have is Is a Dangerous Things xNT Glass NFC Tag. 
    NTAG216 / 13.56MHz / NFC type 2

     

    They release a new chipset this month that allows writing to sector 0.   Which mine does not!

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  • gadget.iom
    gadget.iom over 7 years ago in reply to e14phil

    Phil Hutchinson wrote:

     

     

    1) For Access control, the trick is to treat it like a physical key; anyone can copy your key or any RFID card if they have access to it, so you can use it to get into only the gym it is no problem. But if you use it to get into your house or bank, pair it with a PIN, that way if anyone clones your hand they don't have the pin.

     

    Yeah this is also frequently restricted by a limitation of the hardware an RFID token is communicating with. Many RFID readers don't have a keypad to permit the entry of a PIN code. Some of the more secure installations I work at have RDIF + PIN (especially for external doors and out-of-hours access), but the majority do not. I have personally cloned a number of RFID tags/cards so that the same Unique ID is transmitted by the new token.

     

    Depending on the technology implanted, some of these Unique IDs are factory coded and cannot be changed. The only course of action in the case of a compromise would be a physical switch out. I would be curious to know if the Mifare Classic credentials used in many access control scenarios could be changed on the implant.

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