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Wake Up! Wake Up! It's Yer Chips With Everything

Repost from Schnews | 18.07.2003 16:39 | Globalisation | Health | Technology | London

Repost from Schnews Issue 415
Friday 18th July 2003.

WAKE UP! WAKE UP! IT'S YER CHIPS WITH EVERYTHING






SchNEWS

VISION CHIPS

"Imagine walking into a store and having a computer take an inventory of everything you're wearing-right down to the size and color of your underwear. Store employees could even read the contents of your wallet to determine whether you're a desirable customer or someone they want to ignore based on your financial value. The possibilities for discrimination are quite disturbing." - Katherine Albrecht, director of Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering.

Good news for anyone who feels like their privacy hasn't been infringed quite enough yet. There's a new wee beastie come to fill your lives with joy, RFID (radio frequency identification). If these catch on - and it looks like they already are - everything you buy could soon have a unique number that can be transmitted to anyone nearby, without your permission.

RFIDs are tiny chips which can be embedded into almost anything. When a reading device is placed within 5 metres of them, they transmit their unique number to the device. The idea is that shops will use them instead of barcodes, so you just push your trolley through the checkout, and you'll know how much you owe. Sounds good so far.

Now it gets dodgy, folks. As each chip has a unique number, if someone knows the number of the chip embedded in your shoes, for example, they will be able to track exactly what you do. So a supermarket could know when you enter their store, how long you spend in each section, and what you buy. At the recent Chinese Communist Party Congress, each delegate had to have a badge, equipped with RFID chip, that tracked them wherever they went.

"The Auto-ID Centre is designing, building, testing and deploying a global infrastructure ... that will make it possible for computers to identify any object anywhere in the world instantly," happily burbles the Auto-ID Centre press release.

A casino in Sydney has already put 80,000 of these chips into their employee uniforms in order to reduce theft. Michelin, which make 800,000 tyres every day, are soon to place RFID chips in each tyre, which will be matched to the make of car they are fitted to in a huge database. Tesco are just about to introduce a huge trial of the technology. Other companies testing the technology include all the SchNEWS favourites: Gillette, Gap and Bennetton.

In Tulsa, Oklahoma, a network has been created which has the capability to track anyone going anywhere in the town centre as long as they have an RFID chip somewhere on them. A company called Applied Digital Solutions has already developed an RFID chip for people, it's 11mm long, embedded under the skin and can be read from 4 feet away. And yes, folks, these have already been implanted into people.

The EU is in the process of putting RFIDs into high denomination bank notes as a fraud-reducing measure. "RFID tags also have the ability of recording information such as details of the transactions the paper note has been involved in," according to analyst Prianka Chopra. In one fell swoop this would destroy any of the anonymity of using cash. The other great thing about this is that anyone with an RFID reader (which will become more and more common) can tell exactly how much cash you have on you... Hooray!

So what's the Home Office doing about this potentially huge privacy risk? Urging caution and debating the privacy risks? Nah, course not, they're putting 4.5 million quid up for improving it. There is also much interest in using RFID in passports, driving licenses, and any other documents you could name, potentially allowing no-one to opt out of RFID, if documents without the chip are rejected.

If chips were installed in mandatory ID cards police (and others) could access extensive information on anyone just by scanning from metres away. In the US many supermarkets require official state ID to sign up for loyalty cards. Huge databases can easily be created from this as corporations merge the personal information of their clients in order to build frighteningly accurate personal profiles. So your supermarket shares your info with your bank who shares it with your preferred clothes shops and all of a sudden they've got a massive database of info on Jo Soap. Impressive huh?

Leaked briefings on focus groups held by Auto-ID, the main people behind RIFD, reveal people's true perception of this technology, "There are currently no clear benefits by which to balance even the mildest negative. While the possible benefits were explained to each group at length, nothing seemed to really motivate or inspire. In fact, the presentation of benefits seemed to automatically lead consumers to think of negatives." This dislike has already prompted concessions from suppliers, such as chips that are destroyed when they leave the shop, and only attaching chips to packaging rather than the product itself.

Ironically the leaked briefings came from a public part of the Auto-ID website. If they can't protect their own confidential documents, it's hard to believe their claims of keeping huge databases of customers' information private. As these chips are getting so tiny (less than 0.3mm), they are extremely difficult to find and destroy. Washing will not destroy them, and they need to be crushed or micro-waved (with the corresponding fire risk) to make them ineffective. And you can't exactly go walking round Tesco's with a microwave to disable all the bloody things.

"RFID technology is moving forward at an incredible pace, and there is an urgent need for this legislation. Companies have already begun embedding these chips in products people buy today. For all you know, these chips could be in your home now. The problem is you have no way of knowing," claimed Albrecht.

Luckily this wonderful nirvana of new technology is starting to receive some very bad press. Wal-Mart quietly started a trial of the technology in one of its stores, but when the company that made the chips turned up and started pointing it out to customers, they were horrified. Wal-Mart were so inundated by complaint calls that they had PR executives answering the phones, bringing the trial to a sudden end. Hopefully this technology will be seen in a similar way to GM: big benefits for big business but only losses for everyone else. They get your personal preferences and all the fat profits while you lose any morsel of privacy.

More info: www.nocards.org
www.theregister.co.uk

Repost from Schnews
- Homepage: http://www.schnews.org.uk

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

RFID TAGS update.

20.08.2003 10:38

I believe that Walmart in the States have just said "(Bollocks to em) we're going to do it anyway". Asda is sure to be a leader in all this over here. But they'll all progress with similar speed unless we oppose this very vocally. I think I heard this news on the Alex Jones radio show, available through www.infowars.com

Paul Taylor
mail e-mail: paultaylor007@hotmail.com


whats next ?

23.08.2003 11:20

My 12 year old son has asked me;
"dad will we have one of these fitted ? because we were taught that Hitler used to tattoo his victims will our society 'chip them' ?"

Makes you wonder, it would make a great anti burglar device if we were fitted at birth.

Scary thought dont you think but also quite a deterant. Unless somebody could "alter" your id number, it would start a new hi tech era of ID theft.

food for thought

Paul Arnold
mail e-mail: paul_a_uk@hotmail.com


This is just silly techno fear

23.08.2003 15:22

I've read quite a lot about this technology and this is just techno fear.

The idea behind the chips is that they replace barcodes on products. All they are is a small chip with a unique ID number on it and a small radio transmitter (good for a very small range).

The idea is that instead of an operator bliping every barcode on a scanner you instead just move past the arial and it communicates with all the chips, tallying up everything instantly.

The suggestion that is is a new form of privacy invasion is silly because the chips, just like barcodes, aren't in the product they are in the packaging which is thrown away.

Concerns about privacy are addressed in the respect that even if a third party tried to scan your trolly all they would get is a bunch of unique IDs which are just numbers. The aren't formatted to mean anything, they are just random digits. These digits are matched against a database of what each product is (which only the store has access to), ie 256234654325262 is a toothbrush in the supermarket database.

Please people, lets not over react. The technology could be used to be bad if implemented in the way that is it suggested in this article, but it has never been suggested to be used like this by the inventors.

This technology would be much more efficient. I used to have to do stock take in a store by finding and counting every product. If we had this technology all I would have had to do is walk around the store waving an antenna for two minutes instead of two hours.



James Anon


NOT silly techno fear, folks

23.08.2003 18:02

I am not going to go into a long dissertation regarding how tracking would be achieved. Suffice it to say that for twenty years I have worked in the Information Technology arena (in the U.S.), and for the past 11 years for a global "Fortune 50" corporation, which happens to also operate a retail chain, of which I lead the software/application architecure initiatives. I agree with the in-store benefits as described by Mr. James Anon, however, I know from personal experience in my own company and from networking with various other global retailers what usage is being contemplated by this technology. Please believe me when I say that all the usages described in this article are desired by retail businesses that I have talked with, and are feasibile - many with the technologies available today. Global corporations have every intention of proceeding down this road, and the only reason they have not as yet fully propogated this technology is because of per-chip costs. Look for massive adoption as the price drops to realistic ranges. As to the chips being installed only in the packaging, I suggest Mr. Anon re-read the article and look into this a little more on his own. Corporations are very keen on attaining CRM (Customer Relationship Management) benefits from RFID, and to do that most effectively, the chips must be embedded in product, not packaging. In short folks - we have every realistic right to be extremely concerned about RFID. This is a technology with follow-on advantages to interests ranging from business to government, not all of which could possibly be construed as having the public benefit in mind.

jespy