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Soon, if not already, it will be possible for Big Brother, employers and anyone else has has access to RFID technology to track you, no matter where you are
Big Brother is on the rise and going after you. Be ready to defend yourself from an onslaught of ads about how the RFID chips/tag is a good thing for you and your family.
The RFID Chip is here with all the power and potential of beccomming a tracking device for every human being, and the potential of removing all rights and freedoms globally.
RFID, or Radio Frequency Identification is an identification method, which allows users to store and retrieve information automatically using radio waves. Although it has been around for quite some time, over the past several years, RFID has become more and more popular.
"RFID tags and cell phones will allow physicians and nurses to use their cell phones or wireless PDAs to update medical charts, time of patient visit, drug administration."
This article discusses the current and suggested future use of Radio Frequency Identification devices for implantation in humans.
If you work in California, effective January 1, 2008, your employer will be restricted from forcing you to get an RFID tracking chip implanted under your skin.
Tech advisor Richard Stallman joins me in a quest for ePassport security and I attempt to construct an ePassport slip cover for part three of this RFID series.
Those who feared the bar code tattoo decades ago may not be sleeping easily these days as consumer product bar codes are replaced with RFID chips, while the VWP and national ID standards are forcing the use of the chips internationally.
Alzheimer's Community Care Facility, in West Palm Beach Florida, intends to begin implanting radio frequency identification chips, RFID, in Alzheimer patients, despite the outcry of violation of privacy.
In a world where privacy is a major concern and many US citizens believe that Big Brother really is watching, Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tagging is potentially a private citizen's worst nightmare.
RFID chips which are used for inventory tracking are everywhere. They are even in your passports and being attached to some school children!
Travelers may be able to ease airport and traveling anxiety with the distribution of e-passports across the U.S in 2006. Find out how RFID technology is creating new avenues of security, efficiency, and streamlining a variety of transaction processes.
RFID �tags,' as they're called, are simply small objects that can be incorporated or attached to something, like a human, animal, or product, like an ID Card. RFID tags contain antennas and microchips...
New RFID E-passports the U.S. Government plans to roll out in October may put your personal information at risk.
RFID tags and GPS Personal locators are available on the market now. There are two sides to view on their use. The potential to protect children and Alzheimer's patients from harm vs invasion of privacy and unauthorized access to data.
A closer look at the sugar coated deception of micro-chipping humans.
Orwell may not have lived to see his predictions come true, but he may have not have been too far off after all.
Radio-frequency identification hackers may be the next in the new breed of malicious hackers and crackers, while companies and governments cannot insure our privacy amid their push to pass this technology internationally.
Just when you thought you could not feel more sick about the blunders of Katrina the establishment gives you yet another reason to feel ill. Turns out they were testing new ID technology on the N.O. dead.
Used as primary identification, it will be required for purposes such as boarding a plane or other form of interstate travel, entering ANY Federal building, or any other purpose the government can regulate and obviously for driving.
Technology has grown in many sectors during the past decade and this has brought new advances in everything from computers and automobiles to your identity cards.
Recently, the news has been full of stories about the RFID tracking chip. However I was surprised by a recent article in the New York Times and the Denver Post. It seems that the application of this kind of technology is now speeding up internationally as well.
Fears of identity theft, hackers, privacy invasion has many people leery of obtaining a new U.S. passport. Others are rushing to get their passports to avoid the RFID chip. The State Department reassures the public about safety of the chip.
While RFID tags have existed in some form for more than 30 years, recent gains in functionality - coupled with a decrease in cost - have made the tags more and more ubiquitous.
It never fails. I always lose my keys at the most inopportune moment. Having a door that locks without a key has been one of the worst inventions ever made.
It is not only efficient, but inexpensive as well. An RFID is a wireless device that allows you to pay for gas or access buildings without having to take a card out of your wallet.
Wal-Mart is accelerating its initiative, first implemented in 2005, for suppliers to add RFID tags to allow tracking of products throughout Wal-Mart's system.
The armed forces as well as other government establishments require and need the most secure ID Cards possible. Some of the most important technologies are RFID, double-sided printing, smart cards, microchips, custom holographic images and biometrics.
A new kind of alarm system is a technological development now becoming available for use in hospitals. The system will guard against infant abductions, equipment theft, protection of elderly, mentally and physically challenged patients.
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