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Monday June 14th, 2004

Host

George Noory

Guests

Clip Streams

 
Applications & Future Store
 
Imbedded Chips & Tracking

Recap

RFID & Privacy Abuse

Katherine Albrecht (spychips.com), the founder of Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering (nocards.org), shared her research on Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) products. The small tags which emit identifying signals, are being pitched by major retailers to replace bar codes, and the marketing applications are "quite chilling," she commented.

Albrecht expressed concern that the tags would be read by hidden scanners without consumers' awareness and that marketers would be compiling information about people that they don't necessarily want to share. While the industry is claiming that RFID tags can be turned off after a consumer purchases an item, Albrecht discovered at her trip to the Future Store in Germany, they actually weren't disabling the chips even though they claimed they were.

The government is also involved with the technology, she warned. Cash itself may eventually have RFID chips installed in it, creating a larger tracking and accountability database that Albrecht predicted would be a further erosion of privacy. Of even greater worry, she sees a time when people may be coerced into having implants placed into their bodies in order to make purchases, which she correlated with the "Mark of the Beast" from the Book of Revelation.

Related Articles

Eye in the Sky


In the June issue of After Dark, Paul Toth writes about the latest technology using high-altitude blimps. Here is a sneak peek from his article:

Filled with helium, they would be controlled from land and run more cheaply than the average satellite, which can cost around $150 million. Other advantages include silent operation and the ability to hover over a suspicious area for 12 hours to three days. The Navy has invested $4 million in one prototype which would monitor coastlines, spotting mines, suspicious drivers, or other terrorist activity.

Still, some doubt the blimps will become a major counter-terrorism tool. They point to concerns about domestic espionage, always a hot button political issue. As Barry Steinhardt of the American Civil Liberties Union told the AP, "What is increasingly happening is people are coming under routine surveillance without good cause. It is no longer fanciful to talk about a "1984"-like society."

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