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Biohacking Implants: When Human Optimization Becomes Too Risky
Biohacking has gone mainstream: What began with fitness trackers and sleep apps now includes hardware implants, with 67% of Americans in a recent survey identifying as biohackers.Grinder biohacking goes beyond tracking: Grinders implant magnets, NFC and RFID chips, and other devices directly into their bodies to enhance human capabilities.Human augmentation has real risks: DIY implants often happen outside medical settings, which increases the risk of infection, device failure, and even introduces cybersecurity threats.The line between innovation and harm remains unclear: There aren't any clear rules for where enhancement should stop and where safety regulators and safety standards should step inThe post Biohacking Implants: When Human Optimization Becomes Too Risky appeared first on Techreport.
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