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The next wave in high tech spying

chesty

Bodybuilding Competitor
Elite Moderator
Goodbye UPC bar codes
Wednesday, July 9, 2003 Posted: 9:09 AM EDT (1309 GMT)



An ant walks among computer chips. Packages with a computer chip smaller than the head of an ant and a thin antenna are expected to start appearing in a few stores this year.

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There could be some very invasive uses of these techniques if merchants use the tracking technology to spy on their customers after purchase.
-- Marc Rotenberg, Electronic Privacy Information Center


WASHINGTON (AP) -- Razor blades and medicines packaged with pinpoint-sized computer chips and tiny antennae to send retailers and manufacturers a wealth of information about the products -- and those who buy them -- will start appearing in grocery stores and pharmacies this year.

Within two decades, the minuscule transmitters are expected to replace the familiar product bar codes, and retailers are already envisioning the conveniences the new technology, called "radio frequency identification," will bring -- even as others are raising privacy concerns.

Expired milk reported
A grocery store clerk will know immediately when the milk on the shelf has expired, for example, and replace it before a customer can choose it. Stores could quickly pull from the shelves tainted and damaged products that are recalled or have expired, especially important in health care items.

"It would help you manage your inventory a lot better," says Todd Andrews, spokesman for the Rhode Island-based CVS pharmacy chain that will soon test the chips and antennae on its prescription medicines.

CVS's 4,000 stores fill millions of prescriptions each year but many customers forget to pick them up.

"If you could utilize RFID technology to tell you that a prescription is in the waiting bin, maybe the product could say: 'I've been here 10 days and I haven't been picked up yet.' Then, you could call the patient," Andrews says.

The technology builds upon the UPC (Uniform Product Code) symbol and bar codes that, when read by a scanner, enable manufacturers and retailers to keep up with their prices and inventories. A computer chip smaller than the head of an ant and a thin antenna attached to a bottle, box, can or package will alert retailers and suppliers when a product is taken off a store shelf or moved out of a warehouse. A radio signal is beamed to an electronic reader, which then delivers a message to a computer in the store or factory.

Retailers fund research
CVS, Procter & Gamble and The Gillette Co. are among the 100 retailers and manufacturers that have put up a total of $15 million for research on the new tags at the Auto-ID Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Other Auto-ID labs at the University of Cambridge in England, Adelaide University in Australia, Keio University in Japan and USG-ETH in Switzerland are also working on the technology.

Radio frequency identification technology is not new. The tiny chips and small antennae already are familiar to workers equipped with security cards that, when waived in front of a receiver, unlock the doors to their offices or relay information about the bearer to a guard.

The technology's potential for sending retailers and others information about consumers is already raising privacy concerns, however.

Potential for spying
Marc Rotenberg, executive director of a watchdog organization, the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said retailers should be required to disable the tags before a consumer leaves a store.

"Simply stated, I don't think most people want their clothes spying on them," Rotenberg said.

Researchers developing RFID tags for products so far have focused on the supply chain and limited the range at which a product could be detected. Once their use becomes universal the cost of the tags could be as little as a nickel each, they say.

Sanjay Sarma, the lead researcher at the Auto-ID Center in Massachusetts, says that by adding more functions to the chip, installing a battery and attaching a longer antenna, a receiver far away could read all the information on a chip, including its exact location.

Alerting consumers, marketers
Homes equipped with receiver-readers could alert consumers when they are running low on orange juice or their prescription for heart medicine is about to expire. Hooked up to a national network like the Internet, the at-home devices could also provide details to marketers about a family's eating and hygienic habits.

Sarma acknowledges that gigantic privacy concerns the technology raises, saying one way to address them would be letting consumers disable the chips once they leave a checkout counter.

"Any technology can be abused and we've got to be prepared, be watchful for the abuse," Sarma said.

Ron Margulis, a spokesman for the National Grocers Association, said the privacy concerns are far outweighed by the benefits of RFID. Retailers, he said, could respond much more quickly to product recalls and prevent people from becoming ill from tainted products.

"You do give up a bit of privacy but the benefit could be that you live," said Margulis.




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Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Now, pay particular attention to the last paragraph and the very last sentence.

Since when does grocery store concerns outweigh my privacy concerns?
 
I really don't care if a grocer knows how many condoms I may go through or mik I might buy. It will take them about 20 years to figure out what to do with the data.

LOL!!

Futher more, jamming technology for freaking the chips will be fun for some enterprising engineering / hacker/ techno geek type.

:)
 
Damn, that's really cool stuff.. RF Technology with respect to inventory management has been around for a while, but never on consumer products off the shelf. I still cannot believe this is a cheaper solution, and wonder who will ultimately pick up the tab for this "new" technology. But very cool none the less..
 
Wodin: every time you use your safeway or giant bonus card they record everything you buy... still a decent trade off, if you shop smart, you can trim a couple hundred bucks a month off your bills...

who gives a fuck if they know how much post toasties you go through in a year?
 
as long as they remove the chip at cheackout i dont mind

otherwise, i;d boycott and buy somewhere else. fuck big brother :)
 
SV2 said:
Wodin: every time you use your safeway or giant bonus card they record everything you buy... still a decent trade off, if you shop smart, you can trim a couple hundred bucks a month off your bills...

who gives a fuck if they know how much post toasties you go through in a year?

Yeah...I shop @ Giant and the bonus card saves big time. I don't care if giant knows exactly what I've bought. It's not like they're dealing premium hash in the bakery Aisle. LMAO!!

That'd be cool though....
 
My concern is not in knowing what I may buy at the checkout, it is the other stuff that bothers me. Knowing the location of the product once I buy it and have it at home. The ability to monitor my habits, where I go, what I do, etc is what bothers me. If we are naive enough to believe all they really want is inventory control and pricing we are fools.

Commerce runs our daily lives and the more they presume to understand our habits the more control they can exert upon us. It is not the gov't I worry about, but large corporations.

Some of the best Sci Fi movies use this as their central theme. Aliens, Robo Cop (original), Gattica, and others.

Those with the knowledge will control even more so than those with the money!
 
I'm going to start a chip scan and removal service for the ultra paranoid.
 
reward card/bonus point card already work on this principle
 
Yep, it does.

I am not paranoid, but the old saying that "Absolute power corrupts absolutely" would certainly apply here.

Just think what will happen when gov't decides to do away with paper money and all forms of it in coin etc.

Now we all get paid in credits. Our ability to use these "credits" is highly regulated to the point where our accounts can be turned off and on at will by the bank/gov't.

The power goes down, there is a computer glich or the net goes tits up, we have no way to buy food, gas, etc.

Anyone who has ever had a bank card or charge card knows that they are at the mercy of the bank. They push a button it doesn't work. Suppose they were to put limits on how much you are allowed to spend/withdraw everyday (which they alrady do) Your screwed.

Now couple this with knowing your eating/buying/spending habits etc. Talk about a rat in a cage on a sinking ship!
 
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