Will having longer, healthier lives be worth losing the most basic kinds of privacy? | John Harris
Technology is playing a bigger than ever part in healthcare, but it's a relationship that needs careful regulation
The deal has yet to be approved by the relevant regulators, but Google has got most of the way to buying Fitbit - the maker of wearable devices that track people's sleep, heart rates, activity levels and more. And all for a trifling $2.1bn (1.6bn).The upshot is yet another step forward in Google's quest to break into big tech's next frontier: healthcare.
Last month, in a Financial Times feature about all this, came a remarkable quote from a partner at Health Advances, a Massachusetts-based tech consulting company. Wearables, he reckoned, would be only one small part of the ensuing story: just as important were - and no guffawing at the back, please - "bedside devices, under-mattress sensors, [and] sensors integrated into toilet seats". Such inventions, it was explained, can "get even closer to you than your smartphone, and detect conditions such as depression or heart-rate variability".
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