The hand of someone with an NXT chip implanted in their hand, next to the chip's sensor. (Photo by Amal Graafstra via)
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Finally, there's the security question. About a year ago, I spoke with Avi Rubin, a digital security expert, John Hopkins University computer science professor and author of this TED talk. We were discussing the Hollywood and TV portrayal of hackers – the pasty, disaffected villains and anti-heroes who only have to tap out a few lines of code and suddenly Jack Bauer is being chased by a Predator drone or Bruce Willis is being blown up in a gasworks.Ridiculous, obviously – but only up to a point. In Rubin's line of work, there are far too many examples of wireless devices that are nominally hack-proof that turn out to be, well, not hack-proof. Why does this matter for a chip that opens the door to your office? It probably doesn't. Where it absolutely does matter is in the context of, for example, digital health devices – implants that might be used to monitor patients' medical conditions or provide regular doses of medication from a built-in drug reservoir.READ ON MOTHERBOARD: The Failed Attempt to Rebrand the Word 'Hacker'
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Professor Kevin Warwick (Photo by Lwp Kommunikáció via)
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