Drew Wilson
May 8th, 2009, 06:50 PM
Here's Patrick Dixon, of Siemens, advertising as features all the things about RFID tags that I always thought should bother people the most. The first time I watched this, I figured it was The Yes Men having one over on the Ascent Business Leadership Forum.
I mean - it's all there: implanted RFIDs with human brain tissue growing naturally over them, total surveillance, predictive marketing... I suppose it's possible I'm still seeing this out of context - and that the speaker is actually pointing out how scary and strange this stuff gets. But I don't think so.
My favorite bit may be the reaction shot of one of the businessmen, who seems to be actually considering whether he is now fully and irrevocably engaged with the dark side of the force.
More... (http://www.boingboing.net/2009/05/08/rfids-on-the-brain.html)
When the speaker started talking about RFID tags on the brain, I had a total moment of thinking about the movie, "Final Cut"
Still, I cannot imagine implanting chips into the human body is all that healthy. After all, doctors have a hard enough time trying to get actual human tissue to not be rejected by the body. I can only imagine what would happen if a body rejected a microchip implanted directly onto the brain.
I mean - it's all there: implanted RFIDs with human brain tissue growing naturally over them, total surveillance, predictive marketing... I suppose it's possible I'm still seeing this out of context - and that the speaker is actually pointing out how scary and strange this stuff gets. But I don't think so.
My favorite bit may be the reaction shot of one of the businessmen, who seems to be actually considering whether he is now fully and irrevocably engaged with the dark side of the force.
More... (http://www.boingboing.net/2009/05/08/rfids-on-the-brain.html)
When the speaker started talking about RFID tags on the brain, I had a total moment of thinking about the movie, "Final Cut"
Still, I cannot imagine implanting chips into the human body is all that healthy. After all, doctors have a hard enough time trying to get actual human tissue to not be rejected by the body. I can only imagine what would happen if a body rejected a microchip implanted directly onto the brain.