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Cold Blooded
03-14-2012, 11:43 AM
Source: discovery.com

"First Human Infected with a Computer Virus" (http://news.discovery.com/tech/first-human-infected-with-a-computer-virus.html)


As if humans didn't have enough viruses to worry about, one British researcher has successfully infected himself with a computer virus.

Mark Gasson, senior research fellow at the University of Reading, was able to infect a tiny, radio frequency identification (RFID) chip with a virus before he placed it under the skin on his hand. He uses that chip to activate his cell phone, as well as open secure doors.

Thanks to the computer chip, his cell phone knows when he's using it, and when someone else is trying to operate the device. If someone else tries to use his phone (after, say, stealing it), that person is not able to use it. Only Gasson can.

And instead of him swiping an ID card to enter his building, he just needs to wave his hand to gain entrance. The convenience of not taking out his ID and the safety of his phone come with a price, however.

He served as carrier, and was able to pass the virus on to an external computer. The virus was of Gasson's own design and was not malicious. But he was able to show that computer viruses can move seamlessly between computers within and outside the body. And theoretically, if a person had several computers in his or her body, a computer virus could spread from one to another, infecting them all.

Why would people have computers in their bodies? Researchers around the world are developing tiny electronics that can be ingested or embedded in people for health or even security reasons. Consider the camera pill, which records data from the intestines, bionic eyes, bionic limbs, implantable telescopes to improve vision, and more.

The kind of computer chip that Gasson installed in his body is not in wide use, so no need to worry as of yet. In fact, you have more reason to worry about bed bugs than computer bugs. But in the future, computers will get under our skin, and people will have to take precautions to spread digital infections.

markv
03-14-2012, 11:55 AM
Uh oh Snow Crash (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_Crash) is becoming real. Cyberpunk is finally here!

Miramon
03-14-2012, 12:37 PM
Guy is a press release junkie. Yeah, you can stick an RFID tag in your skin. You can stick a Secureid token up your ass, too, and then only your proctologist will be able to log in to your VPN.

Robert Sharp
03-14-2012, 12:39 PM
Agreed. It's a bit silly. The virus isn't in him, except in the technical sense of being under his skin. If I get a splinter, am I suddenly made of wood too?

markv
03-14-2012, 01:03 PM
Agreed. It's a bit silly. The virus isn't in him, except in the technical sense of being under his skin. If I get a splinter, am I suddenly made of wood too?

Hi, Pinocchio!

RepoMan
03-14-2012, 03:19 PM
This sick-chip-guy may be a bit loony still, but how about installing an IRC surveillance bot in your car that can listen to your conversations and upload them over your 4G connection, simply by playing an iPod recording into a cellphone? (http://www.autosec.org/pubs/cars-usenixsec2011.pdf)

Cars these days are way too wired, and the automotive industry waaaaaaaay too dumb about software security, for me to want to get a car with Bluetooth or 4G or a cell phone or any other damned way to tell it what to do from outside.

Jupiter Jones
03-14-2012, 08:02 PM
Guy is a press release junkie. Yeah, you can stick an RFID tag in your skin. You can stick a Secureid token up your ass, too, and then only your proctologist will be able to log in to your VPN.

thanks, that made my day.

TimElhajj
03-14-2012, 09:51 PM
Achievement unlocked!