Perilous Times and the Mark Of the Beast
Life With Big Brother: Are You Micro-Chip-Ready?
Radio frequency identification, or RFID, technology is inching its way
into our daily lives, often without our knowledge. Corporations have
been working since 1999 to replace product bar codes with tiny
electronic transmitters, or tags, claiming that they advance safety and
convenience.
RFID chips differ significantly from bar codes and their uses are far
more ominous. Bar codes identify only the type of product. Microchips,
in contrast, have a unique serial number that can hold greater amounts
of data and transmit the information faster and from greater distances.
They can be read through packaging, without contact with the reader,
making it more convenient to obtain the data and also enabling
retrieval by individuals other than the intended recipients.
Chips embedded in passports, many ATM cards, contactless ("touch and
go") payment cards, library books, and toll cards are read by reader
devices hidden in doors, walls and other places. In 2004, the Food and
Drug Administration approved the VeriChip Corporation's request to use
RFID chips in humans for safety-related uses, such as linking to
medical records. Although marketed to Alzheimer's patients who may
wander from home and at medical first responders, the chips lack GPS
tracking devices and may be difficult to read in ambulances where
ambient radio frequency emissions may interfere.
Bars in Spain and Holland have held "implant nights" where clientele
injected with implants can skip long waiting lines--bar owners say it
gets rid of the need to carry a wallet and identification cards. Chips
are also making their way into schools. Students can't play hooky any
more at Northern Arizona University, which has purchased an $85,000
system to monitor attendance using the tags embedded in student
identification cards. Card readers will be installed in classrooms
seating 50 or more; students can leave the cards in their wallets
because the readers pick up signals from anywhere in the room. Data is
recorded and teachers get an attendance report.
Identity theft, stalking, and invasion of privacy are some of the
obvious casualties of RFID technology. Applications with the U.S.
Patent Office reveal even more insidious possibilities, such as
releasing cattle prod-like jolts from a distance to stop individuals in
their tracks.
More dangerous are risks of government spying and serious security
breaches. An overreaching government that already conducts wiretapping
and monitoring of Americans may more easily track the everyday
activities of individuals based on their political views, from books
read, to medicines prescribed, to political rallies attended. In terms
of security, the chips are far from hack-proof. In 2006, software and
security researcher Jonathan Westhues exposed the security problems
with RFID-based ID cards. Hired by California State Senator Joe
Simitian to show how easily lawmakers' cards could be read, Westhues
created a hand-held device that read and cloned the card of California
State Assembly member Fran Pavley in just a few seconds. That same
year, the Dutch television program "Nieuwslicht" worked with the
security firm Riscure to crack and decrypt a Dutch-prototype RFID
passport.
Critics Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre, founders of CASPIAN
(Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering) and
authors of Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to
Track Your Every Purchase and Watch Your Every Move, coined the term
spychips and cite two primary privacy concerns: personal information is
gathered without an individual's knowledge, and a tagged item purchased
by a credit card or "loyalty" card may identify the purchaser by
scanning the unique ID number of the item as contained in the tab.
Given the security and privacy threats posed by the far-reaching use of
RFID tags, consumers need to be aware of the extent to which personal
data may be compromised. Individuals should demand that manufacturers
identify products with embedded RFIDs, and should ask banks to issue
chip-free ATM and credit cards. Local lawmakers should introduce and
support legislation requiring security and privacy measures for RFID
tags in local and state-issued identification cards. Only a vigilant
public can prevent us from becoming an RFID-embedded society monitored
by corporations and the government.
Related Link:
World Report-1 - Mark of The Beast Technologies
http://www3.telus.net/thegoodnews/report-1.htm