RFID

25
Jun
2004

Das Konto im Oberarm

Eine Diskothek in Barcelona bietet ihren Stammgästen Microchipimplantate an...

http://www.telepolis.de/tp/deutsch/inhalt/lis/17707/1.html

21
Jun
2004

Using RFID to manage evacuations and TRACK employees

http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/989/1/1/

Citing the increased threat of terrorist attacks on commercial buildings, Axcess promotes its system as a way to track employees during emergencies.

By Claire Swedberg

June 17, 2004—Axcess International, a Dallas-based provider of RFID-enabled personnel access control, asset management and surveillance systems, recently marketing a new use for its RFID tag system, ActiveTag: emergency-evacuation management. The ActiveTag system, which is in use by the U.S. military to track vehicles, personnel and missiles, as well as being tested by businesses, was designed to help track movement of office personnel for security reasons. But the company maintains that its system can provide an effective way for businesses and organizations to track their employees’ evacuation of a facility in the event of a fire or some other disaster.

With ActiveTag RFID readers installed at building doorways, stairs or other exit points, the system would automatically identify personnel as they leave the building, and as they assemble at a disaster meeting or "mustering" point away from the facility, provided that they brought their tags with them. The identification system will allow them to have the credential tag (an ID-size card with a battery-powered RFID tag) in a pocket, on their clothing or in a purse or briefcase and still be identified as they exit the building. The size of a typical driver’s license, the credential tag has a small, lightweight form factor compliant with the ISO 7810 ID-1 standard. Axcess also makes "docking" tags, which have the same components as credential tags and can be inserted into an existing access control card. Each tag transmits at a UHF band (either 315 MHz or 433 MHz) to palm-size network-based RFID readers 18 inches to 700 feet away, depending on the antenna used on the reader.

Axcess RFID tags can also be affixed to employee vehicles and office equipment, and read by readers at doorways, gates or even hallways and elevator entrances. Griebenow adds that the system can be used in conjunction with motion detectors to notify security about unauthorized movement in the building. Motion detectors, for example, can trace the presence of a person who is not carrying an RFID tag and alert security that an unauthorized person is in the office and where that person is.

The ActiveTag system is in use on military bases as well as some universities and commercial establishments to track movement of vehicles and personnel, Griebenow says. In addition, it has been tested for its mustering capabilities at a U.S. Department of Defense research facility. Although Axcess has been working with the technology for the past two years, use of the ActiveTag RFID system in offices has been limited.

“Security systems are driven by cost,” Griebenow explains. While a passive RFID tag may cost 30 cents, the ActiveTag battery-powered tag averages $20. On the other hand, ActiveTag RFID readers are considerably less expensive, averaging about $1,000.

Griebenow adds, however, that the efficiency and accuracy of the ActiveTag makes it the reliable choice for emergency evacuation management and will increasingly become the more popular choice for large companies. To date, a company’s decision to purchase and deploy an emergency evacuation management system, such as the ActiveTag’s, is “usually driven by a problem or a foreseeable problem,” Griebenow says. He argues that the notion of a potential disaster risk has been changed by the increased threat of terrorist attacks that target commercial sites.

Informant: Anna Webb

18
Jun
2004

17
Jun
2004

15
Jun
2004

13
Jun
2004

Forced Injected Microchips For Homeless

Excerpt:

WASHINGTON (UPI) -- The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said Thursday that it was about to begin testing a new technology designed to help more closely monitor and assist the nation's homeless population.Under the pilot program, which grew out of a series of policy academies held in the last two years, homeless people in participating cities will be implanted with mandatory Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags that social workers and police can use track their movements...

http://pittsburgh.indymedia.org/news/2004/04/13377.php


Informant: Harry Mobley

--------

U.S. to implant homeless with RFID tags
http://www.thunderbay.indymedia.org/news/2004/04/13189.php

Please consider signing my petition.

This is the link to the petition:

http://www.petitiononline.com/sg061169/petition.html


Informant: Sheri Grutz

11
Jun
2004

8
Jun
2004

Sachverständige warnen vor Überwachung der Bevölkerung durch RFID-Chips

Nach Einschätzung der Gesellschaft für Informatik (GI) birgt die Technik der RFID-Chips erhebliche Risiken in Bezug auf den Datenschutz. Transponder seien zur Verfolgung eines Menschen einsetzbar. Deshalb fordern Sachverständige die Bundesregierung auf, eine Expertenkommission einzusetzen. Die rot-grüne Bundesregeirung hatte gestern erklärt, dass man keinen Handlungsbedarf sehe...

Mehr dazu unter...
http://de.internet.com/index.php?id=2028909


Quelle: quintessenz-list Digest, Vol 15, Issue 3

7
Jun
2004

Mikrochip für Haustiere bald Pflicht

Anbei ein Ausschnitt aus dem heutigen Artikel in der TZ.

Überschrift: Neuer Tierpass: Was Sie wissen müssen

...........Die Identifizierungspflicht wird verschärft. Übergangsweise genügt noch bis 2011 die bisherige Tätowierung des Tieres. Danach muss den Tieren ein Mikrochip eingepflanzt werden. "Wer heute einen Welpen übernimmt, sollte ihm gleich einen Chip einpflanzen lassen", empfiehlt Astrid Behr vom Bundesverband praktizierender Tierärzte..............

.......und wenn ich nun nicht möchte, dass man mich durch unseren Hund bestrahlt und verfolgt?

Viele Grüße!

Manu Knapp
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