As part of the increasingly competitive global market, the Dutch Parliament has passed a law allowing computer programming workers to receive computer brain implants that will allow them to link directly with their computer systems while creating and modifying program codes.
The bill currently known as “The Info Charix Bill of 2032” is expected to pass through the Dutch Senate without difficulty next week during their last planned assembly of the year. The Info Charix Bill comes on the heels of a bill that was passed in China last month which required factory workers to receive implants that enabled them to control machinery via a neural link.
Holland has struggled with retaining their top global position of computer security programs in the face of increasing competition from Japan and the United States since surpassing the two countries with the introduction of the Gate Mode security system that was developed by Hans Wisjing in 2021.
Allowing computer programmers to code through neural links with their systems will help to minimize coding errors that result from unintentional typing errors. It is also anticipated that the brain implants will significantly cut down on time to market for new computer programs, as the human brain is able to work at speeds radically faster than can human hands can enter information into the system.
Proponents of the commercial uses of computer-human brain implants cite success in personal computing use for users who find the old “keyboard and mouse” interface cumbersome and frustrating. Scientists at Intel’s research lab have been working on the same technology for over 10 years but have been unable to perfect it, leaving the door open for Holland to jump decades ahead by using their own technology for commercial use.
Others who oppose the commercial use of neural implant technology fear that the Dutch government will quickly expand the technology into other areas of the workforce and require that all citizens receive neural implants to increase worker efficiency at the cost of personal freedom.
At this time, the Dutch government insists that the commercial use of brain implants will be isolated to the computer programming sector and assures the people of Holland that the implants are completely optional for those programmers who elect to take advantage of the technology.
RSS Feed
Twitter
Posted in
Tags:










