Biohacker Who Implanted Transit Chip in Hand Evades Fine – Futurism
Futurism.com reports: "In April 2017, Meow-Meow implanted a chip in his hand. The chip is from
his Opal card, needed to ride public transportation in Sydney, and it
essentially functions as a debit card — users add money to it, then
whenever they use a bus, train, or other transportation service, they
swipe their card to pay the fee.
Thanks to his new implant, Meow-Meow no longer had to worry about losing
his card. The biohacker could just place his hand near the Opal card
reader and be on his way.
All this was presumably working out OK for Meow-Meow until August 2017.
That’s when the New South Wales transport authority, which issues the
Opal cards, charged him with traveling without a ticket and failing to
produce a ticket for transportation officials."
Comment: It doesn't surprise me that bureaucrats would be petty and not really grasp the concept. I think the real story here is the use of an implanted chip as a payment device and access device. As a proof of concept, that is very compelling. I think that early adopters like this guy have clearly demonstrated that an implanted chip is a practical means of combining identity verification, access control and mobile payments. It's possible. Whether the MOTB turns out to be a chip is still up for debate but for now, it's clear that this tech is here now.
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