Microchip implants for employees? One U.S. company says yes
Three Square Market, a Wisconsin-based tech company is now offering employees the option to get a microchip injected into their hands. This would allow them to swipe into the office, buy food in the cafeteria, or get snacks at the vending machine just by waving a hand. Although it is not mandatory, over 60% of the company’s 80 workers have volunteered to get the device implanted. Three Square Market is not the first company to implement such a program, but the nature of the technology involved raises concerns about privacy and health. Companies may claim that such chips are encrypted and unobtrusive, but technology implanted today could be easily hacked or theoretically later be used in more invasive ways to track employee movement, without their knowledge or consent. Three Square executives have emphasized that the chip’s capabilities are highly limited, and that the chips are FDA-approved and easily removable.
See "Microchip implants for employees? One U.S. company says yes", Maggie Astor, The Seattle Times, July 26, 2017