Nine
Scary New Technologies That
Big
Brother Wants to Implant Inside You
by Rev. Paul
J. Bern
The world we
live in is finally starting to catch up with the book of Revelation
in the back of the Bible. Thousands of years ago, God declared
through His prophets that in the last days there would be an
explosion of knowledge, and that the sealed books given to the
prophet Daniel would be opened. "But you,
Daniel, close up and seal the words of the scroll until the time of
the end. Many shall go here and there to increase knowledge."
Daniel 12:4 He also said that as this was
happening, a man of dark countenance would rise and deceive the whole
world. As you read this, we stand poised on the razor's edge of
prophetical history. One group, the blood-bought redeemed of the Lord
Jesus Christ, wait in anticipation of the Blessed Hope found in Titus
2:13, as it is written: "... while we
wait for the blessed hope -- the glorious appearing of our great God
and Savior, Jesus Christ." Everyone else
is unwittingly waiting for the Man of Sin, the Antichrist in the
flesh, to step out of the shadows and onto the world stage. Our
question to you is this - which group are you in? "He
also forced everyone, small and great, rich and poor, free and slave,
to receive a mark on his right hand or on his forehead, so that no
one could buy or sell unless he had the mark, which is the name of
the beast or the number of his name." Revelation 13:16,17
Implantable
everything is right around the corner, there is no stopping it.
Wearables will have their moment in the sun, but they're simply a
transition technology. Technology will move from existing outside our
bodies to residing inside us. That's the next big frontier. Here are
nine signs that implantable tech is here now, growing rapidly, and
that it will be part of your life (and your body) in the near future.
1. Implantable
smartphones
Sure, we're
virtually connected to our phones 24/7 now, but what if we were
actually connected to our phones? That's already starting to happen.
Last year, for instance, artist Anthony Antonellis had an RFID chip
embedded in his arm that could store and transfer art to his handheld
smartphone. But what takes the place of the screen if the phone is
inside you? Techs at Autodesk are experimenting with a system that
can display images through artificial skin. Or the images may appear
in your eye implants. Researchers are experimenting with embedded
sensors that turn human bone into living speakers. Other scientists
are working on eye implants that let an image be captured with a
blink and transmitted to any local storage (such as that arm-borne
RFID chip)
.
2. Healing chips
Right now,
patients are using cyber-implants that tie directly to smartphone
apps to monitor and treat diseases. A new bionic pancreas being
tested at America’s Boston University, for instance, has a tiny
sensor on an implantable needle that talks directly to a smartphone
app to monitor blood-sugar levels for diabetics. Scientists in London
are developing swallowable capsule-sized circuits that monitor fat
levels in obese patients and generate genetic material that makes
them feel "full". It has potential as an alternative to
current surgery or other invasive ways to handle gross obesity.
Dozens of other medical issues from heart murmurs to anxiety have
implant/phone initiatives under way.
3. Cyber pills that
talk to your doctor
Implantables
won’t just communicate with your phone; they’ll chat up your
doctor, too. In a project named Proteus, after the eensy
body-navigating vessel in the film Fantastic Voyage, a British
research team is developing cyber-pills with microprocessors in them
that can text doctors directly from inside your body. The pills can
share (literally) inside info to help doctors know if you are taking
your medication properly and if it is having the desired effect.
4. Bill Gates'
implantable birth control
The Gates
Foundation is supporting an MIT project to create an implantable
female compu-contraceptive controlled by an external remote control.
The tiny chip generates small amounts of contraceptive hormone from
within the woman's body for up to 16 years. Implantation is no more
invasive than a tattoo. And, "The ability to turn the device on
and off provides a certain convenience factor for those who are
planning their family.", said Dr Robert Farra of MIT. Gives
losing the remote a whole new meaning.
5. Smart tattoos
Tattoos are
hip and seemingly ubiquitous, so why not smart, digital tattoos that
not only look cool, but can also perform useful tasks, like unlocking
your car or entering mobile phone codes with a finger-point?
Researchers at the University of Illinois have crafted an implantable
skin mesh of computer fibers thinner than a human hair that can
monitor your body's inner workings from the surface. A company called
Dangerous Things has an NFC chip that can be embedded in a finger
through a tattoo-like process, letting you unlock things or enter
codes simply by pointing. A Texas research group has developed
microparticles that can be injected just under the skin, like tattoo
ink, and can track body processes.
6. Brain-computer
interface
Having the
human brain linked directly to computers is the dream (or nightmare)
of sci-fi. But now, a team at Brown University called BrainGate is at
the forefront of the real-world movement to link human brains
directly to computers for a host of uses. As the BrainGate website
says, "using a baby aspirin-sized array of electrodes implanted
into the brain, early research from the BrainGate team has shown that
the neural signals can be ‘decoded' by a computer in real-time and
used to operate external devices." Chip maker Intel predicts
practical computer-brain interfaces by 2020. Intel scientist Dean
Pomerleau said in a recent article, "Eventually people may be
willing to be more committed to brain implants. Imagine being able to
surf the Web with the power of your thoughts."
7. Meltable
bio-batteries
One of the
challenges for implantable tech has been how to get power to devices
tethered inside or floating around in human bodies. You can't plug
them in. You can't easily take them out to replace a battery. A team
at Draper Laboratory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is working on
biodegradable batteries. They generate power inside the body,
transfer it wirelessly where needed, and then simply melt away.
Another project is looking at how to use the body’s own glucose to
generate power for implantables. Think the potato battery of grammar
school science, but smaller and much more advanced.
8. Smart dust
Perhaps the
most startling of current implantable innovations is smart dust,
arrays of full computers with antennas, each much smaller than a
grain of sand, that can organize themselves inside the body into
as-needed networks to power a whole range of complex internal
processes. Imagine swarms of these nano-devices, called motes,
attacking early cancer or bringing pain relief to a wound or even
storing critical personal information in a manner that is deeply
encrypted and hard to hack. With smart dust, doctors will be able to
act inside your body without opening you up, and information could be
stored inside you, deeply encrypted, until you unlocked it from your
very personal nano-network.
9. The verified self
Implantables
hammer against social norms. They raise privacy issues and even point
to a larger potential dystopia. This technology could be used to ID
every single human being, for example. Already, the US military has
serious programs afoot to equip soldiers with implanted RFID chips,
so keeping track of troops becomes automatic and worldwide. Many
social critics believe the expansion of this kind of ID is
inevitable. Some see it as a positive: improved crime fighting,
universal secure elections, a positive revolution in medical
information and response, and never a lost child again. Others see
the perfect Orwellian society: a Big Brother who, knowing all and
seeing all, can control all. And some see the first big, fatal step
toward the Singularity, that moment when humanity turns its future
over to software.
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