The cover charge at this club? An RFID implant

Mon Jun 29, 2009 6:03PM EDT

See Comments (87)

It works for Fido, so why not you?

The same RFID implants used to identify lost pets are now being adapted for use on you and me, and not how one might have originally expected. As with all pioneering technologies, it's leisure pursuits that are getting the first stab at the tech.

Specifically: One beach-oriented Barcelona nightclub, the Baja Beach Club, is using the implants to free customers of the burdens of having to carry their purses or wallets. Makes sense: When you're spending the day in a bikini and flip-flops, where do you keep your ID? Instead, the bouncer just scans your arm with an RFID reader, and you're in. And since you can't carry a credit card or cash either, the implants do double duty: You can pay for drinks with a quick scan of the chip. Chipped patrons also gain access to VIP areas of the club.

The implant procedure is simple and mostly painless (except for all the legal paperwork required): The area where the chip is injected is thoroughly numbed, then the glass capsule is injected beneath a layer of skin and fat on the arm.

It's an interesting experiment, and I'm intrigued to see whether the idea will catch on. The catch, of course, becomes what will happen if a lot of clubs in one area decide to do this. One RFID chip under the skin is probably an interesting conversation piece. A dozen in one arm might make you walk funny. Obviously the one-chip-per-establishment system isn't really sustainable in the long run.

Could someone come along and develop a broad human RFID chip standard? Such plans have been being talked about for years, but nothing much has ever come of it. Naturally, security implications are huge: RFID tags can be scanned, copied, and altered by savvy hackers, and it would be a simple matter for a wily crook to scan people en masse as they pass through, say, the entrance of a mall. It's one thing if they're making off with free drinks on your dime, another if they can suck your life away with the wave of a wand.

Pro or con? Well... it's something to think and talk about while you're doing all that drinking!

Comments on The cover charge at this club? An RFID implant

Post a Comment

Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.

  • 27 Posted by power2puppies on Tue Jun 30, 2009 11:46AM EDT Report Abuse

    These chips cause cancer. Check out www.antichip.com for more information.

  • 28 Posted by maclingman on Tue Jun 30, 2009 12:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Not for me, I hate the idea of being chipped. Uhhh what a terrible idea.

  • 29 Posted by gabby_1961 on Tue Jun 30, 2009 12:32PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is a horrific idea, just like all the spew that is coming from the Hill right now. It is presented in the guise of helping or being "kool" but you don't even want to test these waters.

  • 30 Posted by jswigga2 on Tue Jun 30, 2009 12:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    It's a ploy to get people used to the idea, then eventually force everyone to have it. Then if you piss of the feds or financial institutions, they can just turn your 'life' off with a couple keystrokes leaving you unable to purchase a pack of gum.

  • 31 Posted by earnhardtsrfan2002 on Tue Jun 30, 2009 12:42PM EDT Report Abuse

    ARE YOU FRIGGEN KIDDING.... YAHOO ... Pro New world order... this is insane.... no one should get this or support this.. STOP DRINKING YOUR FLUORIDATED water and WAKE UP!

  • 32 Posted by vulcanism22 on Tue Jun 30, 2009 1:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    THE machines are taking over the world and the spanish are stupid enough to just do it...all to get in a club..lol

  • 33 Posted by janettwokay on Tue Jun 30, 2009 1:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    Everyone here who is posting comments is being tracked. There is no place to hide in the electronic world.

  • 34 Posted by psunjka on Tue Jun 30, 2009 1:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    janettwokay, they can track my behind if you know what i mean

  • 35 Posted by blorgul on Tue Jun 30, 2009 2:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    this is the police state security nightmare control grid. it's a turd wrapped in a twinkie. the overt sugar coating should give it away. oooohhhh slavery is soooo chic. infowars.com prisonplanet.com

  • 37 Posted by sophine33 on Tue Jun 30, 2009 4:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is disgusting - what happens when the sheeple are dumbed down - they will give away human soverenty for convenience. What's worse is the robotic journalist who wrote this article doesn't even present the alarming consequences of this trend but instead presents it as good idea. Wake up!! Do you really think having a scannable chip inside your body is going to be used for only altruistic purposes? Or will it be the first step in tracking everything you do and controlling you remotely? Anyone read a little book called 1984 or Brave New World?

  • 38 Posted by semaphore_2000 on Tue Jun 30, 2009 4:55PM EDT Report Abuse

    re: "The same RFID implants used to identify lost pets are now being adapted for use on you and me" Cattle and pets (beasts) are RFID'd (marked, branded, charred). Hence such is called "mark of the beast".

  • 39 Posted by rtrapasso on Tue Jun 30, 2009 5:11PM EDT Report Abuse

    Oh, God: here lay the Alex Jones tards. I'm all for the simplification of life through technology in this sense, but the example given of people being "robbed" walking through the entrance of the mall is a good one. How can we secure something like this? There's a lot of risk, sure, with ATM's and scanners at the grocery checkout, but there are at least some safeguards. I'm finding it hard to see how to do it with RFID chips.

  • 41 Posted by emanon1913 on Tue Jun 30, 2009 6:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    Hey rtrapasso, don't forget to get baxter's swine flu vaccines from obama this flu season, we need to keep the smart ones like you alive and healthy.

  • 42 Posted by blakpressmail on Tue Jun 30, 2009 6:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    Prophecies of biblical proportions on the horizon, and all we can think about it the death of Micheal Jackson (God rest his soul... FYI, I hope his affairs were in order). A day I think most of us have feared. The withholding of information is always slowly revealed. How much do they have prepared for us. I've been away from scripture for a while, but the Bible clearly states that in the end times all the signs will be as clear as day. I don't how much more clear you can get.

  • 43 Posted by xodorgodx on Tue Jun 30, 2009 7:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    Oh yeah an RFID chip from the good people at IBM. You remember IBM which was started by a man named Hollerith. You remember Hollerith? He invented the punch card system that the Nazis used to keep track of the Jews in WWII. What could possibly go wrong? Sign me up!

  • 44 Posted by casanova642 on Wed Jul 1, 2009 12:14AM EDT Report Abuse

    Cashless society. The article tries to make it sound like some new and interesting idea. This has been planned for decades and various industries are tasked with trying to bring it to light. RFID is something that you DO NOT want. It only keeps the honest people honest and allows the criminal architecture keep up with their shadow activities. Don't dare not piss off the overlords. They will know exactly where to find you based upon the readings of your implant. Reject this at all costs!

  • 45 Posted by kamavasayita on Wed Jul 1, 2009 2:58AM EDT Report Abuse

    I think it's a perfectly acceptable piece of technology for someone in say, a weapons grade plutonium materials storage facility, the mainframe room of the National Security Agency, or some deep underground government research lab working on Doomsday technology; but I believe while economically and technologically feasible, it would be socially and morally disastrous - instead of cutting off the hands of thieves who steal wallets, thieves would cut off hands and use them as wallets. Likewise, while it may be safe under one government regime, after just one bad election or in the hands of several existing governments, it could turn into another Iran/Tiananmen Square, or worse, a 4th Reich.

Post a Comment


My Tech

Please enable your browser's cookies to activate the My Tech column.

Also on Yahoo! Tech

Computers Home Office Wi-Fi & Networking Phones & PDAs Cameras & Camcorders TV & Home Theater Portable Audio
 

Question and Answer content at Yahoo! Tech is written by Yahoo! users at Yahoo! Answers. Yahoo! does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any Yahoo! Answers content. For more information, read the Full Disclaimer.

Opinions expressed by the Advisors are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Yahoo! Inc. Yahoo! receives no compensation from any manufacturer or distributor nor does it compensate any Advisor for the coverage of any product or service in any Advisor's content.