Technology offers
conveniences
such as opening the
garage
door from your car or changing the television station without touching the TV.
Now one American company is offering its employees a new convenience: a
microchip implanted
in their hands. Employees who have these chips can do all kinds of things just by waving their hands.
Three Square Market is offering to implant microchips in all of their employees for free. Each chip costs $300 and Three Square Market will pay for the chip.
Employees can volunteer to have the chips implanted in their hands. About 50 out of 80 employees have chosen to do so. The president of the company, his wife and their children are also getting chips implanted in their hands.
The chip is about the size of a grain of rice. Implanting the chip only takes about a second and is said to hurt only very briefly. The chips go under the skin between the thumb and forefinger.
With a chip in the hand, a person can enter the office building, buy food, sign into computers and more, simply by waving that hand near a
scanner
. The chips also will be used to
identify
employees.
Employees who want convenience, but do not want to have a microchip implanted under their skin, can wear a
wristband
or a ring with a chip instead. They can perform the same tasks with a wave of their hands as if they had an implanted chip.
Three Square Market is the first company in the United States to offer to implant chips in its employees. Epicenter, a company in Sweden, has been implanting chips in its employees for a while.
Three Square Marketing says the chip cannot
track
the employee. The company says scanners can read the chips only when they are within a few inches of them.
Three Square Market says that the chips protect against
identity
theft
by being
encrypted
, similar to credit cards. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the chips back in 2004, so they should be safe for humans, according to the company.
In the future, people with the chips may be able to do more with them, even outside the office.
Todd Westby is Chief Executive Officer of Three Square Market. He says, "Eventually, this technology will become
standardized
allowing you to use this as your passport, public transit, all purchasing opportunities, etc."
Poll
Would you volunteer to have a chip implanted in your hand by your employer? Vote in the poll and let us know what you think.
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Words in This Story
convenience
-
n.
a quality or situation that makes something easy or useful for someone by reducing the amount of work or time required to do something
garage
-
n.
a building or part of a building in which a car, truck, etc., is kept
microchip
-
n.
a group of tiny electronic circuits that work together on a very small piece of hard material (such as silicon)