The most annoying part of the internet is probably the
fact that you have to memorize close to a dozen passwords to get to all
your bank accounts and credit cards and social media profiles. And if
you're lazy and just use one, then it's the worry that if one of those
accounts gets hacked, it could easily be all of them.
Motorola thinks it has a solution to the password problem. At Wall Street's annual digital technology conference D11, Motorola announced their plans
to create a pill that would serve as a password for all your accounts.
What does that mean? You would provide Motorola with your password
information and they would create a custom pill that had a tiny
electronic chip inside it. That chip would basically turn your entire
body into an authentication device, and you would theoretically never
have to remember another password in your life. Naturally, the pill
would pass through your body in about 24 hours, so you would have to
take the pill on a daily basis.
Is it just me or does this seem like a ridiculous solution to a small annoyance?
Yes, passwords are obnoxious and I always forget them and am
constantly filling out those password reset forms, but none of those
things could convince me to start taking a daily pill.
And there are so many obvious flaws in this solution.
First, putting an electronic pill that emits a signal into your body
(presumably every day for the rest of your life) just does not seem
healthy. Considering that studies
are finding potential links between cell phones and cancer, I would be
pretty concerned about putting an electronic chip into my body for
essentially permanent purposes.
Second, this system seems to be sacrificing some measure of security
for simplicity. It might be easier to have your accounts just identify
you by your body emitting a signal, but your password information isn't
nonexistent, it's just now in a database with Motorola. And as we all
know, big companies
aren't impervious to hacking. So if someone manages to get into this
hypothetical database, it would basically be like hitting a gold mine of
identity information.
Third, if this was your only method of password authentication, not
taking a pill in the morning would mean that there would be no way to
access your information without returning home. It's turning what is a
digital and theoretical concept into a physical object, which is the
opposite of what the Internet is about. And that's not to mention that
if someone managed to steal these pills, they could steal your identity
with absolutely no problem. You wouldn't need to be an advanced computer
hacker to steal someone's identity, just an average thief.
Some are also concerned that such a pill could be used to track people and their activities.
Passwords may be annoying, but so are a million other necessary
little things you have to do to get by in life. We don't need a pill for
everything.
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