Govt. Tracking: RFID & NAIS
POSTED AT: APFN POGO
HTTP://WWW.APFN.NET/POGO.HTM
Consumer privacy expert Katherine Albrecht, joined by activists
Pat Showalter and Celeste Bishop in hour two, spoke out against
the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), a USDA plan to
track farm animals using RFID chips. Showalter and Bishop, who
both own animals in a small scale, non-commercial capacity, said
the new regulations are very burdensome for small farmers.
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A002I06031523555700550-rfid3.MP3
(4.56MB) 6Min 37 Sec
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06031601051000550-rfid4.MP3
(4.42MB) 6Min 25 Sec
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A002I06031523555700550-rfid5.MP3
(4.55MB) 6Min 37 Sec
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06031601051000550-rfid6.MP3
(4.60MB) 6Min 41 Sec
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06031601051000550-rfid7.MP3
(5.81MB) 8Min 26 Sec
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06031601051000550-rfid8.MP3
(3.10MB) 4Min 29 Sec
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A004I06031602453700550-rfid9.MP3
(4.34MB) 18Min 58 Sec
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Implant ID chips called big advance, Big Brother
By Jonathan Sidener
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
March 12, 2006
Doctors implanted a radio ID tag under Sean Darks' skin that
allows the executive to enter restricted areas of his Ohio
security company.
Jack Schmidig, the police chief in Bergen County, N.J., has a
similar chip that doctors can use to find his medical records in
an emergency.
And in a somewhat renegade use of the technology, Washington
state entrepreneur Amal Graafstra unlocks his home and car and
logs on to his computer using a chip he bought online and had
implanted near his thumb.
All three say putting radio-frequency identification chips under
the skin can improve people's lives. An implant is like having a
set of keys, or an ID card, that can't be lost, they say.
Graafstra jokes that he could end up naked in the alley outside
his house and still get inside using the electronic key embedded
in his hand.
“People ask me why I don't just carry an RFID card in my
wallet,” Graafstra said. “I don't want to have to remember
whether I have my card or my keys with me. I can leave my house
and not carry anything with me.”
Privacy advocates say today's voluntary use is a step toward a
future in which employers or the government mandate implants.
“It's creepy,” said Beth Givens, director of the Privacy Rights
Clearinghouse in San Diego. “People realize in their gut that if
we require implanted chips, we've become the kind of society
where people can be tracked by their government.”
Good or bad, the technology is having a breakout year in the
United States.
Last month, Darks' security video company, Citywatcher.com,
became the first in the nation to use RFID implants to control
who has access to a restricted area.
Nationwide, about 70 hospitals – none in San Diego – are
developing or have begun programs to make the implants available
to patients and to put RFID scanners in emergency rooms to scan
all unconscious patients.
Those applications use the only radio ID chip approved by the
federal Food and Drug Administration for implanting in humans, a
product from Florida-based VeriChip that's about the size of a
grain of rice. Doctors use a syringe and a local anesthetic to
insert them under the skin.
Critics say the devices offers the government, employers or
corporations a potentially nefarious tool to track citizens.
There are several types of RFID, but the technology available
from VeriChip and the versions used by the do-it-yourself crowd
don't provide a signal that can be tracked.
The chips don't use batteries or any other power source. To
work, the they must be held within a few inches of a scanner.
Through a process called induction, the scanner temporarily
powers the chip by generating a magnetic field that passes
through the skin. While it has power, the chip transmits a
signal that's picked up by the scanner.
VeriChip says about 70 people in the United States have been
implanted with its chips, which cost about $200, including
doctors' fees.
In addition, an estimated 80 people have had unauthorized
“hobbyist” chips implanted. Like Graafstra, they buy them over
the Internet to experiment with the technology, which has been
used for years to track lost pets. The technology enthusiasts
describe themselves as the “do-it-yourself tagged community.”
The United States lags other countries in adopting radio ID
implants. In Mexico in 2004, more than 100 employees in the
organized-crime division of the Attorney General's Office
received implants giving them access to secure areas.
That same year in Spain, the Baja Beach Club in Barcelona
launched a VIP zone for patrons with radio ID implants. VIP
members use them to authorize credit-card payments for their
drinks. The club's owners have expanded the program to a bar
they own in the Netherlands.
At Citywatcher.com, which operates security cameras and stores
video for the Cincinnati Police Department, Darks wanted to beef
up security for the area where the video is stored.
Biometric systems, which measure unique physical characteristics
such as fingerprints or facial structure, were too expensive for
his small company, Darks said. So he decided to use the VeriChip
system.
He had a radio ID chip placed in his tricep and gave his
employees the option of getting chipped.
Three volunteered. Two others carry RFID cards.
“It was completely voluntary,” Darks said. “I wouldn't ask my
employees to do something that I wouldn't do myself.”
The implanted device is essentially just an unseen key card, he
said.
“I'm not worried about the government or anyone else tracking me
through the chip in my arm,” Darks said. “If they wanted to,
they could use the GPS information from my cell phone or the
trail of places where I've used my credit card. That's much more
of a threat.”
Schmidig, the New Jersey police chief, got a VeriChip implant
for other reasons. He said a friend's daughter had an episode of
diabetic shock and was unable to speak, which delayed medical
treatment. At about the same time, he heard about a nearby
hospital implementing the VeriChip system.
So Schmidig decided to have a medical ID chip implanted in his
arm.
“I have a vacation home in Florida, and there are hospitals down
there using this system,” he said. “All my medical records are
up here. If something happens to me in Florida, this could speed
up access to my medical records.”
Schmidig said he has no concerns about privacy as a result of
his implant. His chip doesn't contain any personal information,
only an ID number for a medical database.
“I'm not a Big Brother fanatic,” he said. “This is not GPS that
can be used to follow me around.”
Graafstra of Bellingham, Wash., is a technology enthusiast and
author of “RFID Toys: 11 Cool Projects for Home, Office and
Entertainment,” published this year.
A year ago, he decided to take his interest in radio ID
technology to a new level, becoming the founding member of the
do-it-yourself RFID world. Graafstra bought a chip on the
Internet and had a doctor insert it in the tissue between his
thumb and index finger.
Graafstra said it's unlikely that anyone would go to the trouble
of trying to hack his chip to get the code to his front door. It
would be easier to force the door open, he said.
“There's very little possibility that anyone could sneak up and
get within a couple of inches of my tag to read it,” he said.
While he's comfortable having the code to open his front door
and car in a radio transponder in his hand, Graafstra says the
technology may not be secure enough to protect credit-card
information or access to sensitive government offices.
Although difficult, it's still possible to record and clone the
signal from an implanted chip, he said.
Critics say the practice opens a door that would be best left
closed.
“RFID has the potential to produce some wonderful applications,”
said Givens, the San Diego privacy advocate. “It also has the
potential to be a technology with which a government-issued ID
number can be read promiscuously.
“It's being rushed to the marketplace without understanding the
consequences,” she said. “The privacy implications have not been
thoughtfully explored.”
Liz McIntyre, co-author of “Spychips: How Major Corporations and
Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID,” said she
isn't swayed by technical arguments that implanted chips are
benign.
“There may be limits on what the technology can do today, but we
don't know what the technology will be capable of tomorrow,”
McIntyre said. “Yes, it's a step on that slippery slope. You
wouldn't walk down the street with your Social Security number
printed on your shirt. Why would you want an RFID chip capable
of transmitting an identification number?”
Jonathan Sidener: (619) 293-1239; jonathan.sidener@uniontrib.com
=====================
Implant ID chips called big advance, Big Brother
Doctors implanted a radio ID tag under Sean Darks' skin that
allows the executive to enter restricted areas of his Ohio
security company. Jack Schmidig, the police chief in Bergen
County, N.J., has a similar chip that doctors can use to find
his medical records in an emergency. And in a somewhat renegade
use of the technology, Washington state entrepreneur Amal
Graafstra unlocks his home and car and logs on to his computer
using a chip he bought online and had implanted near his thumb.
SignOnSanDiego.com
Date: 2006-03-12
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spiker77@comcast.net wrote:
Did You Know That ....
A Million dollars in tightly bound $1,000 bills would produce a
stack 4 inches
high.
A Billion dollars in tightly bound $1,000 bills would produce a
stack
approximately 300 feet high.
A Trillion dollars in tightly bound $1,000 bills would produce a
stack nearly 60
MILES HIGH!
NOW ... when your esteemed United States government officials
and politicians
talk about spending, taxes, and what we OWE because of their
drunken spending
binge, you'll be able to relate to those insane amounts!
Source: Larry Burkett, The Coming Economic Earthquake
http://snipurl.com/nr44
Please pass this along to all who are concerned about our insane
government and
their equally insane spending that will one day RUIN our nation!
---------------
"You can run, but you may not be able to hide. Not just from Big
Brother, but Big Business, writes Katherine Albrecht in her book
Spychips, a detailed analysis of how Radio Frequency
Identification technology -- RFID for short -- threatens to
erode the last vestiges of our privacy."
Listen:
http://www.eyeonbooks.com/EOB/1105/albrecht.wax
RECENT CASPIAN MEDIA:
http://www.spychips.com/media/media_clips.html