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CASPIAN to protest launch of "spy chip" network

Liz McIntyre | 10.09.2003 23:29 | Technology | Cambridge | London

CASPIAN plans to protest the launch of the EPC "spy chip" network. UK protest also planned as well as virtual protests.

Protest Planned at World Launch of RFID Spy Chip Network
CASPIAN will demonstrate during Gillette "Reasons to Believe" speech

September 10, 2003

Consumers will protest the "EPC Symposium" at Chicago's McCormick Place
Convention Center Tuesday, September 16 at 10 AM. The Symposium is
scheduled to showcase the world launch of the Electronic Product Code
(EPC) network.

The EPC network, nicknamed by proponents "The Internet of Things," was
designed to connect all items on the planet to computer databases via
miniature RFID "spy chips." The stated purpose of the network is to tag
and track every manufactured item with a unique EPC identification
number.

Corporations like Gillette, Procter & Gamble and Unilever plan to embed
EPC-compliant RFID chips in consumer products and product packaging. "We
have serious privacy and civil liberties concerns about this technology.
Corporations and governments could use it to register products to
individuals and secretly track them after purchase," says Katherine
Albrecht, Founder and Director of CASPIAN.

"Businesses have dismissed consumer concerns by characterizing RFID as
an 'improved bar code,' but RFID is very different," says Albrecht.
"These RFID spy chips can be read silently from a distance, right
through your clothes, wallet, backpack or purse by anyone with the right
reader device. For example, the chips can be secretly embedded in credit
cards or sewn into the seams of pants where they can be used to observe
people's movements without their knowledge or consent."

The 10 AM protest time was chosen to coincide with a speech by Gillette
Vice President Dick Cantwell entitled, "Reasons to Believe." "Protesting
during Mr. Cantwell's speech is particularly appropriate," says
Albrecht. "Gillette has never answered consumers' questions regarding
its use of RFID, and we find the use of religious terminology in the
title of his speech disturbing."

Gillette is the target of a worldwide boycott for its involvement with
RFID-enabled "smart shelves" that have been used by the Tesco retail
chain in England to secretly photograph consumers.

CASPIAN has delayed announcing protest details due to restrictions
placed on First Amendment activities by McCormick Place. ACLU attorney
Adam Schwartz, who is representing CASPIAN in this matter, has issued a
letter to McCormick Place authorities requesting that protestors be
allowed to express themselves inside the convention center, close to the
EPC Symposium event.

"We are grateful for the ACLU's help," says CASPIAN spokeswoman Liz
McIntyre. "With their assistance, we are now confident that we will be
able to exercise our free speech rights in accordance with the law."

In addition to the live protest in Chicago, consumers from around the
world will stage their own local protests of the EPC launch. For
example, consumers in England plan to protest on Monday, September 15 at
a Tesco supermarket in Sandhurst, Surrey. Details of that protest are
available at  http://www.notags.co.uk.

Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering (CASPIAN)
is a grass-roots consumer group fighting retail surveillance schemes
since 1999. With members in all 50 U.S. states and more than 15 nations
around the globe, CASPIAN seeks to educate consumers about marketing
strategies that invade their privacy and to encourage privacy-conscious
shopping habits across the retail spectrum.

For more information about the protest visit  http://www.stopRFID.com.

NOTE: Virtual protest site:  http://stoprfid.textamerica.com

Katherine Albrecht, CASPIAN Founder and Director: (877) 287-5854
Liz McIntyre, CASPIAN Communications: (877) 287-5854 or  liz@nocards.org
Mary Starrett, CASPIAN Media Associate: (602) 315-6193

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Liz McIntyre
- e-mail: Liz@nocards.org
- Homepage: http://www.stoprfid.com


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