Monday, April 17, 2006



Mark of the Beast
"Fundamentally, these RFID devices were designed for inventory management and not security applications. The biggest issue with RFID technology is that anyone with an appropriately equipped scanner who can get near enough to the chip can 'wake it up' and read its contents. What is 'near enough' will depend on the design of the antenna and the electronic characteristics of the chip. Careful design of a high-gain antenna may enable the device to be read or at least detected from considerable distance.

Privacy groups raise the concern that even being able to 'wake up' the chip is an invasion of privacy. Someone, such as a foreign intelligence organization or criminal group, could easily setup an antenna and would be alerted to any passport they "see". Even if they could not read the data from the chip, they would be able to detect the passport and its unique signal structure (referred to as a signature) that would likely identify the issuing country of the passport."

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I Was a Teenage Implant
"Amal has two RFID implants, one in each hand. His left hand contains a 3mm by 13mm EM4102 glass RFID tag that was implanted by a cosmetic surgeon using a scalpel to make a very small cut, into which the implant was placed. His right hand contains a 2mm by 12mm Philips HITAG 2048 S implant with crypto-security features and 255 bytes of read/write memory storage space. It was implanted by a family doctor using an Avid injector kit like the ones used on pets. He can access his front door, car door, and log into his computer using his implants, and has written a book called RFID Toys, which details how to build these and other RFID enabled projects."
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x-rays)