-------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 11:24:37 -0700 To: •••@••.••• From: Alan Rycroft <•••@••.•••> Subject: Justice.int-- Register: US approves human chip implants Technology for its own sake -- RFID Implants Posted by: space on http://pej.org Friday, October 15, 2004 - 11:14 AM In response to the approval of RFID human implants by the US FDA [enough acronyms for you?] The Register contributor Thomas Greene speaks eloquently of technology gone mad. "Unique RF identity chips and concealed RF readers everywhere: madmen have been complaining about this since the earliest days of radio. That's how we knew they were madmen. o-nly an IT industry divorced from any sense of good taste and human dignity, in which technology becomes an end in itself, could strive to make the nightmares of the insane a common reality." -- Space & Technology Editor Feds approve human RFID implants By Thomas C Greene (thomas.greene at theregister.co.uk) Published Thursday 14th October 2004 23:43 GMT http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/10/14/human_rfid_implants/ The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a gimmick from Florida-based Applied Digital Solutions (http://www.adsx.com/) to chip people with RFID implants - previously confined to tracking animals - thereby making it easy to access their medical records, even when they cannot, or would rather not, cooperate. The tiny, passive RFID devices, called VeriChips (http://www.adsx.com/prodservpart/verichip.html), are injected under the hide. They do not contain the medical data in question, but instead store a unique ID number that is used to access records o-n a remote server maintained by Applied Digital, using a handheld reader. The chips are legal in numerous applications, but cannot be used as medical devices without FDA approval - which they now have got. So, what is the problem that this technology solves? We don't think there is o-ne, unless doctors' offices are being flooded with people who can't recall their own medical histories. Yes, some people do suffer from dementia, but these are most often found already in nursing facilities and hospitals, or at least supervised by a nurse or family member. Of course, accident victims may be found unconscious, but a simple dog tag suffices to warn emergency crews of drug allergies and tricky medical conditions. And the dog tag has two distinct advantages: first, in non-emergency situations, the owner can prevent others from reading it simply by concealing it under the clothes; and second, the data is there: it doesn't suffer from availability problems, as remote servers so often do. The company says that the chips will save lives and reduce medical errors, but we are not persuaded. Indeed, if, during an emergency, the data were unavailable due to some technical glitch, and the patient were unconscious, the VeriChip might cost lives that a simple dog tag or bracelet would have saved. Medical data availability is a serious safety issue, as we discussed previously (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/28/ bush_wants_electronic_medical_recor ds/). Technology for its own sake For the moment, Applied Digital implies (but does not actually guarantee) that chip owners will be the o-nly people permitted to add or delete medical data in their database. But this could change over time, and the idea that some alarmist quack or passionately risk-averse hospital administrator might be permitted to embellish o-ne's records is decidedly frightening. o-ne would need an ironclad guarantee, with serious teeth, asserting that no such thing will happen, before submitting to the hypo. And then there's the question of access. o-nce you've got an implanted RFID chip, you necessarily lose control over the people who might wish to read it. You have a unique identifier that can be read without your knowledge. Thus there is nothing to prevent, say, businesses or government bureaux from surreptitiously reading o-ne's VeriChip, and correlating o-ne's ID number with their own set of criteria, hosted o-n their own remote servers, for whatever purposes their twisted bureaucratic minds can conceive. And Applied Digital certainly is thinking along these lines. Indeed, the medical care angle looks like a warm-and-fuzzy gimmick to speed adoption so that other, potentially more sinister, applications might follow. "VeriChip can enhance airport security, airline security, cruise ship security, intelligent transportation and port congestion management. In these markets, VeriChip could function as a stand-alone, tamper-proof personal verification technology," the company's PR boilerplate explains. We doubt that many people will go for this scheme, but if it were to succeed commercially, it seems plausible that the embedded RFID chip could eventually become a universal identifier, like the Social Security number, which itself was not intended to be a universal identifier but has in fact become o-ne. Mission creep happens. Unique RF identity chips and concealed RF readers everywhere: madmen have been complaining about this since the earliest days of radio. That's how we knew they were madmen. o-nly an IT industry divorced from any sense of good taste and human dignity, in which technology becomes an end in itself, could strive to make the nightmares of the insane a common reality. And yet, here we are. ® Thomas C Greene is the author of Computer Security for the Home and Small Office (http://basicsec.org), a comprehensive guide to system hardening, malware protection, o-nline anonymity, encryption, and data hygiene for Windows and Linux. o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Alan Rycroft, Sunshine Communications 250.592.8307 Canada Box 8307, Victoria, BC, V8W 3R9 •••@••.••• http://SunshineCommunications.ca ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Read the Peace, Earth & Justice News - http://pej.org Subscriptions . Information . Links . Toolkit - http://pej.ca ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -- ============================================================ If you find this material useful, you might want to check out our website (http://cyberjournal.org) or try out our low-traffic, moderated email list by sending a message to: •••@••.••• You are encouraged to forward any material from the lists or the website, provided it is for non-commercial use and you include the source and this disclaimer. Richard Moore (rkm) Wexford, Ireland "Global Transformation: Whey We Need It And How We Can Achieve It", current draft: http://www.ratical.org/co-globalize/rkmGlblTrans.html _____________________________ "...the Patriot Act followed 9-11 as smoothly as the suspension of the Weimar constitution followed the Reichstag fire." - Srdja Trifkovic There is not a problem with the system. The system is the problem. Faith in ourselves - not gods, ideologies, leaders, or programs. _____________________________ "Zen of Global Transformation" home page: http://www.QuayLargo.com/Transformation/ QuayLargo discussion forum: http://www.QuayLargo.com/Transformation/ShowChat/?ScreenName=ShowThreads cj list archives: http://cyberjournal.org/cj/show_archives/?lists=cj newslog list archives: http://cyberjournal.org/cj/show_archives/?lists=newslog _____________________________ Informative links: http://www.indymedia.org/ http://www.globalresearch.ca/ http://www.MiddleEast.org http://www.rachel.org http://www.truthout.org http://www.williambowles.info/monthly_index/ http://www.zmag.org http://www.co-intelligence.org ============================================================