As Apple Pay and other mobile payments services grow, these guys from
Sweden have taken it one step further and just made the first ever
payment via the human body.
The world's first ever bio-payment was
done with the xNT implant inside a man's hand and it has used the NFC
chip to trade Bitcoins between two different accounts.
Patric
Lanhed is the biohacker who used his implant to send money from one
Bitcoin account to another by just using the top of his hand.
Lanhed
told techradar, "We want to do something with the chip implant that
actually mattered to people. This is a great way of using this kind of
tech."
Handy payment solutions
"What we're really missing right now is the payment option – we think this could lead to something good."
Patric has founded a biohacking organisation called Bio Pay Dev
with friends Hektor Wallin and Juanjo Tara. Based in Sweden, the team
aim of to develop implant payment technology to help it into the
mainstream.
Patric was implanted back in the spring, but Juanjo
also had the implant on Monday this week after seeing the success Patric
has had. Hector has plans to get his installed very soon.
Juanjo
said, "It took ten seconds – I didn't feel any pain. I thought it'd be
more painful. After a couple of days I had a swelling in my hand. I know
it's there but I can't feel it, there's no pain or weird sensation."
Lanhed
estimates there are now over 1,000 Swedish people who are implanted as
opposed to 200 earlier in the year and the technology is growing faster
than ever.
"Two years from now..."
On November 3, the Bio
Pay Dev team attended a software conference in Malmö, Sweden called
Oredev. All 1,500 attendees were offered the opportunity to get the
implant for free.
Wallin said, "This type of technology needs to
be adopted by the mainstream. Right now, people go "what are you crazy"
because it's impossible for them to think they'd do it themselves.
"It will come to a point where they accept it. When we reach that point more and more people will get the tech."
Security
is another big issue and it's understandable why some people would be
worried about "getting their upgrade" when it involves inserting a new
kind of technology into your body.
Tara assures us it's all fine
though. "People think there are risks with this kind of tech but you
can't read it from a few kilometers away.
"The fact is the chips
are passive – they're not active, they're not sending out stuff. The
important thing for people to understand is the data on the chip is
secure." Lanhed said, "Maybe two years from now we'll have the actual digital solution for payments on the market.
"It would be really cool to get a credit card or PayPal on board because that's more accessible than Bitcoin."
Biohack plan to make this technology open source as well so people can play around with it themselves and add in new features.
For
now it's just the Bio Pay Dev team working on the tech. The first live
bio-payment was successfully carried out at the Oredev conference in
Malmö yesterday.
But there's still a lot of work to do before we'll be using this instead of a credit card, or even Apple Pay.
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