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DCitrus9

Son of a son of a sailor
Joined
Nov 26, 2001
Posts
273
or not. I don't like the idea of a microchip implant, but I'd do darn near anything to get the jumpseat back!

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6237364/

WASHINGTON - The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday approved an implantable computer chip that can pass a patient’s medical details to doctors, speeding care.


http://g.msn.com/0AD0000Y/646163.1??PID=2183464&UIT=G&TargetID=1010835&AN=17757&PG=NBCMSHVeriChips, radio frequency microchips the size of a grain of rice, have already been used to identify wayward pets and livestock. And nearly 200 people working in Mexico’s attorney general’s office have been implanted with chips to access secure areas containing sensitive documents.

Delray Beach, Fla.-based Applied Digital Solutions in July asked the FDA for approval to use the implantable chip for medical uses in the United States. The agency had 60 days to reply to the “de novo” application.

It’s the first time the FDA has approved the use of the device, though in Mexico, more than 1,000 scannable chips have been implanted in patients. The chip’s serial number pulls up the patients’ blood type and other medical information.

With the pinch of a syringe, the microchip is inserted under the skin in a procedure that takes less than 20 minutes and leaves no stitches.

Silently and invisibly, the dormant chip stores a code — similar to the identifying UPC code on products sold in retail stores — that releases patient-specific information when a scanner passes over the chip.

At the doctor’s office those codes stamped onto chips, once scanned, would reveal such information as a patient’s allergies and prior treatments.

The FDA in October 2002 said that the agency would regulate health care applications possible through VeriChip. Meanwhile, the chip has been used for a number of security-related tasks as well as for pure whimsy: Club hoppers in Barcelona, Spain, now use the microchip much like a smartcard to speed drink
 
DCitrus9 said:
or not. I don't like the idea of a microchip implant, but I'd do darn near anything to get the jumpseat back!
If they use these to allow access to the jump seat, then you better start watching over your shoulder. A terrorist would only have to 'retrieve' your chip and inject it into himself to repeat past attacks.
Plus the usual paperwork falsifications which are easy as pie.
All they would have to do is whack one of us, cut out the chip, dip it in disinfectant and inject themselves with it. A 15 minute procedure.

A retinal scan would be more secure but you know what? If they want to mimic someone, there is always a way around the latest technology.
 
They won't do it to pilots. They wouldn't have any excuse to screen us as passengers anymore, negating the illusion of security.
 

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