We are one step earlier to the prospect: a British scientist has become the initial human being to pact a computer virus.

Dr. Mark Gasson, a cybernetics specialist at the University of Reading, intentionally impure himself (by way of an RFID chip entrenched in his wrist) with a kind computer virus. This was division of a research designed to show how implantable bionic machines are prone to computer viruses.

The machine in Gasson's arm is an RFID chip that produces a signal and allows him to access sure parts of the University of Reading laboratory, as well as function his cell phone. In other words, the chip purposes as an interior swipe-card.

Gasson and his colleagues then made a virus for the chip. They put it on the chip and Gasson went into the lab--and when the lab's computers read the code, the virus ingrained itself into the database and began to duplicate. Now if any of his other colleagues steal their customary swipe-cards to get into the lab, the virus can duplicate itself on their swipe-cards.