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{"id":277,"date":"2018-01-16T18:17:33","date_gmt":"2018-01-16T18:17:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/ravenholm-consultations.com\/?p=277"},"modified":"2020-11-11T16:39:33","modified_gmt":"2020-11-11T16:39:33","slug":"chipping-cyborgs-and-people-the-questions-we-should-be-asking-ourselves","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ravenholm-consultations.com\/chipping-cyborgs-and-people-the-questions-we-should-be-asking-ourselves\/","title":{"rendered":"Chipping, cyborgs and people \u2013 the questions we should be asking ourselves"},"content":{"rendered":"

Author’s Note:
\n<\/em>I initially read Mr. Palmer’s article when it first came out. However, even though I had penned a response then, many more questions opened to me and I ended up revising a few things with new, even better references that answered my own questions on the theme. I must here state that I am neither against technology nor pro it; as Mr. Palmer himself states many times in his articles, we should be looking at responsible innovation in the near future. The time for innovation is now, because the time for innovation always exists. From the moment our ancestors’ discovered that fire and tools could be useful and put them to specific uses, we have been innovating – in good and in bad – and generally, it is the use of the tool in question that is more likely to cause the problem, rather than the tool itself… for instance, knives are used daily in kitchens, but have been used in murders, and computers have been used for much good (like easily accessible academic data for start) as well as for crimes such as hacking. The one thing to remember, though – and as I am an anthropologist, my first thought is always to that particular end of the invention bargain – that we not dealing with innovation and invention <\/em>outside of humanity, and that humanity has seen amazing acts of goodness along with terrifying acts of darkness. We have a checkered history and must remember it to ensure that any and every new technology serves one rather than the other, and that we minimise the option of it being misused to pamper prejudice and hate at all costs. <\/em><\/p>\n


\n

 <\/p>\n

Just yesterday, I chanced upon a brilliantly written article by Shelly Palmer<\/a> on the subject that has recently gained vogue especially amongst those interested in or directly working in software technology. It is not a subject that will remain separate from the rest of us for long \u2013 while it is no longer purely theoretical, chipping of humans, in this case employee volunteers in some companies, is happening not in some distant future we can wave off as too far (and therefore safely far fetched) but now. By now, several companies in the Western world have chipped employees (cf. Epicenter, a hi-tech office block in Sweden, (articles 1 (BBC)<\/a> and 2 (BBC)<\/a>) and Three Square Market in Wisconsin<\/a><\/em> (all accessed on 06\/09\/17)<\/em>), and the professional world is slowly dividing between the fearful, brooding conspiracy theorists and the clamouring, enthusiastic supporters of the procedure.<\/p>\n

That is precisely the danger of the situation, and one that Mr. Palmer addresses quite well \u2013 the divide is too strongly either this or that, and therefore, I might add, dismissable by the general public. But how long can we pretend that it is still mostly science fiction, an experimentation of a couple of technologically enthusiastic geeks that have little to do with our reality? Not very long; in recent years, technology has boomed (consider Alexa, prospect of self-driving flying cars<\/a>, military drones, the new cell-changing technology to create babies from cells<\/a> (more<\/a>), etc.)<\/em>, and that means that we are facing an equally rapid approach of the moment when we might all have to make the decision. But even here, we already face the first problems.<\/p>\n

If this is happening in some<\/em> companies, it might soon be done in your<\/em> company, and we all have, I believe, the knowledge that \u201cvolunteer\u201d often does not stand for a person willingly submitting themselves to an activity or procedure \u2013 that companies have, in the past and in the present, pressured, discriminated and even forced, and that the so-called volunteering was purely a theoretical way of trying to prevent lawsuits and prosecution for the crimes against employees (cf. here<\/a> and here<\/a>)<\/em>. I am not saying that this is happening in the present cases, as the situation is not so intimately known to me that I could judge on it; but what I am saying is that we have seen discrimination happen, and that often, it is presented as voluntary, meaning that there might soon be chipping counted amongst such cases as it becomes more frequent.<\/p>\n

But can it become more frequent and what does it actually mean?<\/p>\n

Let us explore this from anthropological perspective.<\/p>\n

Chipping of pets definitely exists in our world (and has become a part of the issue and should therefore be explored in this article), and that way, we already have a socio-psychological (i.e. psychological induced by society we live in, are born into) predisposition to see it as something intended for protection, safety, care. As a pet owner, I can tell you that vaccinations, pet travel and many other parts of pet owning become virtually impossible, especially in some countries, if the pet is not chipped (cf. here<\/a><\/em>); chipping is viewed as a matter of factly act of protection for our pets, and by many pet owners, it is perceived as safe and far less cruel than tattooing or branding, which I definitely agree with.<\/p>\n

Chipping, whatever the volunteers say, is not a painless procedure. Mine and my partner\u2019s nine adopted cats are chipped and they, apart from one, are on hormonal implant, a safer way of neutering than the classical sterilisation and castration (where many side-effects, including incontinence, are frequent in animals, cf. here<\/a> & here<\/a><\/em>)). This means yet another big needle and a repeated procedure, but it is definitely the lesser of the two evils, and this goes for the chipping as well. The one cat who is sterilised thankfully hasn\u2019t developed incontinence, but we have to constantly be cautious with her food as she grows simply huge very quickly, meaning she is constantly somewhat hungry and moody because she sees others getting bigger portions than her and she finishes when others are still eating. (Not something that is likely going to happen to you if get chipped by your company, but I wanted you to understand why we have decided the way we have, rather than for the usual, casually accepted yet much greater procedure that carries greater consequences, which are generally ignored, because the procedure is so usual<\/em>\u2026 something that you might want to consider in the whole chipping situation.)<\/p>\n

However \u2013 those who think that chipping is the one prick forever, and then we can all live happily ever after are woefully wrong. As a pet owner, I know that:<\/p>\n