Advertisement
Technology
WorldRussia & Central Asia

The ‘biohackers’ who want to be advanced humans

  • Russian geeks and wealthy join global movement whose followers seek to upgrade their bodies with experimental tech
  • Converts hope to live long enough to see scientific advances extend life massively

Reading Time:5 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Igor Korabelnikov in a chamber chilled by liquid nitrogen to minus 120 degrees Celsius after exercising on a treadmill at a gym that calls itself a ‘biohacking laboratory’. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Gripping a scalpel, Vladislav Zaitsev makes an incision in the fold of skin between his client’s thumb and index finger and pushes in a small glass cylinder.

Alexei Rautkin, a 24-year-old programmer in a hoodie, is having a chip inserted in his hand so he can open the door to his office without swiping a card.

“It’s something I decided a long time ago,” he says.

Advertisement

“Mainly because it’s convenient but there’s also a kind of exclusivity, because practically no one else has this.”

Rautkin and Zaitsev are among a growing number of Russians interested in biohacking, a global movement whose followers seek to “upgrade” their bodies with experimental technology and DIY health fixes that began in Silicon Valley at the start of the last decade.

Advertisement
Programmer Alexei Rautkin uses his chipped hand to open a door at his e-commerce company in Moscow. Photo: AFP
Programmer Alexei Rautkin uses his chipped hand to open a door at his e-commerce company in Moscow. Photo: AFP

For some, the lifestyle trend involves implanting technology under their skin.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x