Dutchman implanted into the hands of NFC-chip
VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B9HcFxTM8hI
Dutch entrepreneur Martin Vismeyer survived surgery to implant in both hands chip supporting contactless technology Near Field Communication (NFC). Enthusiast took this step for Secure payments using "Cryptocurrency" Bitcoin.
Two tiny glass capsules (2x12 mm) with integrated NFC Type 2 RFID-compatible chipset NTRAG216 were implanted into the fleshy part of the hand between the thumb and forefinger. Thus, in one hand "Biohacking" store contact information (it can be overwritten) to his electronic purse that can be scanned by any NFC-smartphone in the other - the encrypted secret key to access "Bitcoin".
Vismeyer is the head of Mr. Amsterdam Bitcoin, which is installing Bitcoin-ATMs in the Netherlands and Belgium. According to the businessman, he has often load machines "Bitcoin", so he decided to implant an NFC-chip currently in hand to minimize risks when transferring virtual money.
"To transfer the funds to our network, we need to scan our labels, including my hand, which contains a portion of the encrypted private key, and only if the phone will be able to transfer money to the 'hot' purse" - said Vismeyer. In the future enthusiast plans to replace door locks in your home NFC-tags to them could only open it.
VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B9HcFxTM8hI
Dutch entrepreneur Martin Vismeyer survived surgery to implant in both hands chip supporting contactless technology Near Field Communication (NFC). Enthusiast took this step for Secure payments using "Cryptocurrency" Bitcoin.
Two tiny glass capsules (2x12 mm) with integrated NFC Type 2 RFID-compatible chipset NTRAG216 were implanted into the fleshy part of the hand between the thumb and forefinger. Thus, in one hand "Biohacking" store contact information (it can be overwritten) to his electronic purse that can be scanned by any NFC-smartphone in the other - the encrypted secret key to access "Bitcoin".
Vismeyer is the head of Mr. Amsterdam Bitcoin, which is installing Bitcoin-ATMs in the Netherlands and Belgium. According to the businessman, he has often load machines "Bitcoin", so he decided to implant an NFC-chip currently in hand to minimize risks when transferring virtual money.
"To transfer the funds to our network, we need to scan our labels, including my hand, which contains a portion of the encrypted private key, and only if the phone will be able to transfer money to the 'hot' purse" - said Vismeyer. In the future enthusiast plans to replace door locks in your home NFC-tags to them could only open it.
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