What is RFID?
An overview from CASPIAN's Spychips website
www.Spychips.com
Wednesday, October 12, 2005
RFID stands for Radio Frequency IDentification, a technology that uses tiny
computer chips smaller than a grain of sand to track items at a distance. RFID
"spy chips" have been hidden in the packaging of Gillette razor products and in
other products you might buy at a local Wal-Mart, Target, or Tesco - and they
are already being used to spy on people.
Each tiny chip is hooked up to an antenna that picks up electromagnetic energy
beamed at it from a reader device. When it picks up the energy, the chip sends
back its unique identification number to the reader device, allowing the item
to be remotely indentified. Spy chips can beam back information anywhere from a
couple of inches to up to 20 or 30 feet away.
Some of the world's largest product manufacturers have been plotting behind
closed doors since 1999 to develop and commercialize this technology. If they
are not opposed, their plan is use these remote-readable spychips to replace
the bar code.
RFID tags are NOT an "improved bar code" as the proponents of the technology
would like you to believe. RFID technology differs from bar codes in three
important ways:
1. With today's bar code technology, every can of Coke has the same UPC or bar
code number as every other can (a can of Coke in Toronto has the same number as
a can of Coke in Topeka). With RFID, each individual can of Coke would have a
unique ID number which could be linked to the person buying it when they scan a
credit card or a frequent shopper card (i.e., an "item registration system").
2. Unlike a bar code, these chips can be read from a distance, right through
your clothes, wallet, backpack or purse -- without your knowledge or consent --
by anybody with the right reader device. In a way, it gives strangers X-ray
vision powers to spy on you, to identify both you and the things you're wearing
and carrying.
3. Unlike the bar code, RFID could be bad for your health. RFID supporters
envision a world where RFID reader devices are everywhere - in stores, in
floors, in doorways, on airplanes -- even in the refrigerators and medicine
cabinets of our own homes. In such a world, we and our children would be
continually bombarded with electromagnetic energy. Researchers do not know the
long-term health effects of chronic exposure to the energy emitted by these
reader devices.
Many huge corporations, including Philip Morris, Procter and Gamble, and
Wal-Mart, have begun experimenting with RFID spy chip technology. Gillette is
leading the pack, and recently placed an order for up to 500 million RFID tags
from a company called "Alien Technology" (we kid you not). These big companies
envision a day when every single product on the face of the planet is cataloged
and tracked with RFID spychips!
As consumers we have no way of knowing which packages contain these chips. While
some chips are visible inside a package (see our pictures of Gillette spy
chips), RFID chips can be well hidden. For example they can be sewn into the
seams of clothes, sandwiched between layers of cardboard, molded into plastic
or rubber, and integrated into consumer package design.
This technology is rapidly evolving and becoming more sophisticated. RFID
spychips can even be printed, meaning the dot on a printed letter "i" could be
used to track you. In addition, the tell-tale copper antennas commonly seen
attached to RFID chips can now be printed with conductive ink, making them
nearly imperceptible. Companies are even experimenting with making the product
packages themselves serve as antennas.
As you can see, it could soon be virtually impossible for a consumer to know
whether a product or package contains an RFID spychip. For this reason, CASPIAN
(the creator of this web site) is proposing federal labeling legislation, the
RFID Right to Know Act, which would require complete disclosures on any
consumer products containing RFID devices.
We believe the public has an absolute right to know when they are interacting
with technology that could affect their health and privacy.
Don't you?
Join us. Let's fight back before big corporations track our every move.
For additional information, see "RFID: Tracking Everything Everywhere", an
excerpt from an article by Harvard doctoral candidate and CASPIAN founder
Katherine Albrecht, that appeared in the Summer 2002 issue of the Denver
University Law Review
Spychips is a project of CASPIAN, Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion
and Numbering (www.nocards.org). CASPIAN has been educating consumers about
retail privacy issues since 1999.
This document is available online at: www.spychips.org/what-is-rfid-print.html
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