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How Major Corp's. Partnering With Gov't. Plan to Track Your Every Move Mary Starrett | November 5 2005 When Harvard doctoral candidate and privacy advocate Katherine Albrecht started sniffing around the halls of MIT and got her mittens on some major corporations internal memos she discovered an Orwellian plan that she wasted no time trying to warn us about. Big companies are spying on us. The founder of C.A.S.P.I.A.N. (Consumers Against Privacy Invasion and Numbering) has compiled the disturbing evidence in a book. Within days of being published Spychips shot to the top of amazon.coms non-fiction list. Its no wonder; calling the book the Devils Dictionary for RFID, WIRED.COMs Bruce Sterling said: If youve never heard of RFID or spychips it would be quite a good idea to read this book pretty soon Hurry. Waste not another precious moment. Sterling calls Albrecht and her co-author Liz McIntyre the Lone Ranger and Tonto of the RFID frontier computerized super female consumer advocates of tomorrow two loud, flamboyant, irrepressible Internet activists, researching and publishing the secretive, business-confidential of how corporations and government are tracking our every move. Bottom line is this: Tiny, traceable chips are in stuff we buy, right now. Its a creepy concept and very 1984-ish, but its reality and wed better get a bead on the current and planned-for applications of the simple, little technology with big privacy invasion potential. This book primes the pump for a huge consumer backlash, because leviathan corporations have gone to great lengths to make sure consumers dont find out how extensively RFID technology is being (secretly) used and promoted. Big companies like Wal Mart, Proctor& Gamble, Exxon- Mobil, Benneton, Philips, Gillette, Max Factor . to name a few, and, as you might expect the federal government are already using traceable chips all the better to spy on you with, my dear. The book Spychips is well-documented, easy to read and immensely entertaining. The authors treat a serious subject with humor, and you dont have to be a techie to get it (having just mastered Cut and Paste I am proof of that.) Technology is a queer thing. It brings you great gifts with one hand and stabs you in the back with the other. -- C.P. Snow, New York Times, 1971 Spychips details a world of no more privacy where your every purchase is monitored and recorded in a database and your every belonging is numbered. The book outlines how RFID is being used in medications Viagra and Oxycontin and how the FDA is pushing for RFID on all prescriptions. [Spychips is a book that everyone should have. Order "SpyChips"] Naming Names Spychips is in essence saying Im telling to major corporations like Proctor & Gamble and Gillette. P&Gs Lipfinity lipsticks been tagged with live RFID chips (at one time the company even surreptitiously videotaped women as they picked out their favorite shade sending live pictures back to corporate voyeurs thousands of miles away.) Gillette placed an order for 500 million RFID tags and was busted after secretly placing the devices in Mach3 razors. Add these products to the list of RFID-tagged consumer goods like Pantene Shampoo, Purina Dog Chow and Huggies baby wipes. In Spychips we learn the fascinating history of RFID. It had its origins, Albrecht and McIntyre tell us, with a Russian spy named Lev Termen. Termen (aka Theramin) used sold-out concerts in New Yorks Metropolitan Opera House to actually relay intelligence information back to the Soviets. Based on that technology an RFID bug was later hidden in a wooden plaque of the Great Seal of the United States and presented to U.S. Ambassador Averell Harriman by Russian school children in 1945. The spychipped plaque hung in the ambassadors office giving up Cold War secrets until it was discovered in 1952. At the time, American spooks hadnt a clue what this RFID technology was. Now, not only have they since figured it out, but government, along with global corporations is now using it to spy on the American people. Spychips explains that, with funding from P&G, Gillette, and the Uniform Code Council (the bar code folks), the MIT Auto-ID Center became the proving ground for RFID and all its invasive applications back in 1999. In no time the Centers goal was to see RFID tags on every manufactured item with a single, global network to track them. For instance, the nosey folks at IBM have been working on ways to track people in libraries and elevators. ( And you thought Muzak was ubiquitous!) Function Creep The technology that yesterday enabled manufacturers to keep track of pallets of shipped goods is already being proposed for decidedly more invasive applications. One patent application describes a sniffer or RFID reader which would be used on the doorway of homes and cars to inventory the consumers spychipped items and send the results to marketers. The book points out that as with everything related to RFID, the motive is to spy on us for marketing purposes. The potential for the governments abuse of this technology is discussed as well. Albrecht and McIntyre write that far from protecting the public from the RFID threat, our government is actively promoting the technology the department of Defense and the United States Postal Service were sponsoring members of the Frankenstein laboratory like Auto ID Center. The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration are both encouraging RFID adoption through their recently issued track and trace guidelines. RFID chips in smart guns, schoolchildren being tagged for security the list is getting longer all the time. Can You Say: Schnuffelchippen? Thats the German word for spychips or RFID tracking devices. Germans were up in arms when they recently found out the loyalty cards they carried for the Metro Future Store contained spychips. The grocery store was forced to recall more than ten thousand cards it had issued to unwitting shoppers and that was just the beginning. Massive protests, testimony before government committees and media interviews decrying the deception followed. Consumer backlash can be ugly. German consumers did not take kindly to being tracked.
That is until now. |