Seinfeld The Implant
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Movies/Shows | Seinfeld |
Air date | February 25, 1993 |
Previous episode | The Old Man |
Next episode | The Junior Mint |
Directors | Tom Cherones |
Written by | Peter Mehlman |
Watch tv episode | Watch |
Season number | 4 |
Writer | Peter Mehlman |
Episode number | 19 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2046732 |
Seinfeld The Implant Life story
Jerry breaks up with his girlfriend after Elaine convinces him she has breast implants. At the sauna, Elaine discovers that they are real after she pretends to fall. George goes to Detroit for a funeral with his girlfriend.
Parkinson's implant restores man's ability to walk
... Before The Implant, navigating steps or going into a lift posed extra problems for Marc...
Doctors warn about social media link to abortion rise
... Videos on the platform include false claims about hormonal contraception, such as the pill, The Implant, the jab and some types of the coil...
Brain implants help paralysed man to walk again
... Prof Jocelyn Bloch, of Lausanne University, who is the neurosurgeon who carried out the delicate surgery to insert The Implants, stressed that the system was still at a basic research stage and was many years away from being available to paralysed patients...
‘Doctors fitted a contraceptive coil without my consent'
... Annita, now 31, says the doctor explained that The Implant had been inserted because this was her fourth abortion...
The microchip implants that let you pay with your hand
... " The Implant can be used to pay for a drink on the beach in Rio, a coffee in New York, a haircut in Paris - or at your local grocery store, " says founder and chief executive Wojtek Paprota...
Bionic eyes: Obsolete tech leaves patients in the dark
... It says the firm nearly went out of business in 2020 and is now concentrating on a brain device - the Orion - which also provides artificial vision, while providing only limited support to the 350 or so who have The Implants...
Elon Musk's brain chip firm denies animal cruelty claims
... " It also alleges that macaque monkeys used in the experiment were caged alone, suffered " facial trauma" and had seizures and infections local to the site of The Implant...
Paralysed man with severed spine walks thanks to implant
... I met Michel at the lab where The Implant was created...
The microchip implants that let you pay with your hand
Patrick Paumen causes a stir whenever he pays for something in a shop or restaurant.
This is because the 37-year-old doesn't need to use a bank card or his Mobile Phone to pay. Instead, he simply places his Left Hand near the contactless card reader.
A small LED light under his skin then immediately glows, and the payment goes through.
" The reactions I get from cashiers are priceless! " says Mr Paumen, a Security Guard from the Netherlands.
He is able to pay using his hand because back in 2019 he had a contactless payment microchip, little bigger than a grain of rice, injected under his skin.
" The procedure hurts as much as when Someone pinches your skin, " says Mr Paumen.
A microchip But it is only during The Past decade That the technology has been available commercially.
And when It Comes to implantable payment chips, British-Polish firm, Walletmor, says That Last Year it became The First company to offer them For Sale .
" The Implant can be used to pay for a drink on The Beach in Rio, a coffee in New York , a haircut In Paris - or at your local grocery store, " says founder and chief executive Wojtek Paprota. " It can be used wherever contactless payments are accepted. "
Walletmor's chip, which weights less than a gram, is comprised of a tiny microchip and an antenna encased in a Biopolymer - a naturally sourced material, similar to plastic.
Mr Paprota adds That it is entirely safe, has regulatory approval, works immediately after being implanted, and will stay firmly in place. It also lasts indefinitely, and does not require a battery, or other power source. The Firm says it has now sold More Than 500 of The Chips .
The technology Walletmor uses is near-field communication or NFC, the contactless payment system in smartphones. Other payment implants are based on radio-frequency identification (RFID), which is the technology typically found in physical contactless debit and credit cards.
For many of us, the Idea of having such a chip implanted in Our Body is an appalling one,
However, without giving a percentage figure, The Report added That " invasiveness and security issues remained a major concern" for respondents.
Mr Pauman says he is doesn't have any of these worries.
" Chip implants contain the same kind of technology That people use on a daily basis, " he says, " From key fobs to unlock doors, public transit cards like the London Oyster Card , or bank cards with contactless payment function.
" The reading distance is limited by the small antenna coil inside The Implant . The Implant needs to be within the electromagnetic field of a compatible RFID [or NFC] reader. Only when there is a magnetic coupling between The Reader and the transponder can The Implant can be read. "
He adds That he is not concerned That his whereabouts could be tracked.
" RFID chips are used in pets to identify them when they're lost, " he says. " But it's not possible to locate them using an RFID chip Implant - The Missing pet needs to be found physically. Then the entire body gets scanned until the RFID chip Implant is found and read. "
Yet the issue with such chips, (and what causes concern), is whether in The Future they become ever more advanced, and packed full of a person's private data. And, in turn, whether this information is secure, and if a person could indeed be tracked.
Financial technology or fintech, expert Theodora Lau, is co-author of The Book Beyond Good: How Technology Is Leading A Business Driven Revolution.
She says That implanted payment chips are just " an extension of The Internet of things". By That she means another new way of connected and exchanging data.
Yet, while she says That many people are open to the Idea - as it would make paying for things quicker and easier - the benefit must be weighed up with the risks. Especially as and when embedded chips carry more of our personal information.
" How much are we willing to pay, for the sake of convenience? " she says. " Where do we draw The Line when It Comes to privacy and security? Who will be protecting the critical infrastructure, and The Humans That are part of it? "
is a series exploring how technological innovation is set to shape the new emerging economic landscape.
Nada Kakabadse , professor of policy, governance and ethics at Reading University's Henley Business School , is also cautious about The Future of more advanced embedded chips.
" There is a Dark Side to the technology That has a potential for abuse, " she says. " To those with no love of individual freedom, it opens up seductive new vistas for control, manipulation and oppression.
" And who owns the data? Who has access to the data? And, is it ethical to chip people like we do pets? "
The result, she cautions, could be " the disempowerment of many for the benefits of a few".
Steven Northam, senior lecturer in innovation and entrepreneurship at the University of Winchester, says That the concerns are unwarranted. In addition to his Academic Work he is The Founder of UK firm BioTeq, which has been making implanted, contactless chips since 2017.
Its implants are aimed at people with disabilities who can use The Chips to automatically Open Doors .
" We have daily enquiries, " he says, " And have carried out over 500 implants in the UK - But Covid caused some reduction in this. "
" This technology has been used in animals for years, " he argues. " They are very small, inert objects. There are no risks. "
Back in the Netherlands, Mr Pauman's payment chip has a built-in LED light That is kinetically-powered by The Moment of his body. Describing himself as a " biohacker" - Someone who puts pieces of technology into his body to try to improve his Performance - he has 32 implants in total, including chips to Open Doors and imbedded magnets.
" Technology keeps evolving, so I keep collecting more, " he says. " My implants augment My Body . I wouldn't want To Live without them, " he says.
" There will always be people who don't want to modify their body. We should respect That - and they should respect us as biohackers. "
Source of news: bbc.com