Implanting tracking chips in one's children is the latest policy the World Economic Forum has rolled out in an apparent attempt to normalize the behavior.
"Should you implant a tracking chip in your child?" a blog post from the WEF asks. "There are solid, rational reasons for it, like safety. Would you actually do it? Is it a bridge too far?"
The organization is suggesting such a phenomenon as an inevitability.
"With the right support, vision and audacity, these transformative technologies — that go beyond augmentation — become possible.
"As scary as chip implants may sound, they form part of a natural evolution that wearables once underwent. Hearing aids or glasses no longer carry a stigma," the blog post adds. "They are accessories and are even considered a fashion item. Likewise, implants will evolve into a commodity."
Critics' concern lies with privacy, civil rights and the concept of human autonomy, and not a "stigma" of a bump under the wrist or the head, according to Reclaim the Net.