The California legislature recently banned employers from mandating
RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) implants for their employees.
While I’m glad I’m covered in my state, why isn’t this ban being
implemented at the Federal level to cover every citizen? I’m not
suggesting that we ban the devices; I’m suggesting that no one should
be forced to stick on of these in their body just to get a job. I’ve
covered the issue of RFID many times before and I’m not fundamentally
opposed to RFID technology or RFID implants, but I do oppose the idea
that anyone should be forced to implant one in their body and it would
be just as offensive if my employer asked me to tattoo a bar code on to
my forehead.
It would be just as offensive if my employer asked me to tattoo a bar
code on to my forehead
Verichip RFID implants are worthless from a security standpoint because
they’re essentially passing clear text data over the radio waves and it
can easily be cloned. If it’s cloned, you’ll have to undergo knife
treatment to get a new one unless the chip is reprogrammable. Even if
Verichip stopped using clear text authentication and switched to strong
NSA Suite B grade crypto, I wouldn’t want it inside my body. Is any
material item in this world worth life or limb? If someone wants my
access device and password at the point of a gun, I’d give it to them.
I don’t want them to have to cut it out of my body.
Last summer there were some issues raised about the privacy and safety
of RFID enabled passports. While the scenarios were arguably remote
and the privacy concerns overblown because someone can copy the same
information from a regular passport, there is no reason to have the
RFID in the passport since an optical or contact based system would
have the same effectiveness. RFID in the traditional sense gives you
more flexibility and convenience because of its long wireless range but
the usable range for RFID passports is literally a few millimeters
away. RFID in the Passport implementation is effectively a contact
based solution that has none of the flexibility but all of the security
liabilities of a wireless solution.
What about the argument that we need RFID implants for our children? I
have two kids and I can tell you that RFID isn’t going to make me feel
any better. First of all, that RFID implant isn’t going to be a
“LoJack” device for children and you’re not going to be able to track
them down if they’re abducted unless you’re within a few feet of the
child. Second, having the RFID implant might mean the abductor will cut
it out of your child to take out the implant. I might consider an
external device hidden in a watch or something that has an active
transmitter with some effective range but implants are simply out of
the question.
As critical of RFID as I am, I’m not so sure why some people are so
anti-RFID that they don’t even want the devices to exist in the first
place. RFID implants can make sense in medical areas. If it makes it
easier for emergency workers to identify a patient’s special needs,
that’s great so long as the consumer gets to voluntarily place it in
their own body. There’s also new technology being developed for
diabetics where the RFID sensor can wirelessly report glucose levels
without you having to prick your finger every day. RFID inventory
tracking and logistics can simplify and automate many things so we must
distinguish between good RFID devices and bad ones.
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