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High Tech Helpers or Big Brother Surveillance Tools?
CityWatcher.com, a provider of surveillance equipment, attracted little notice
itself - until a year ago, when two of its employees had glass-encapsulated
microchips with miniature antennas embedded in their forearms.
The “chipping” of two workers with RFIDs - radio frequency identification
tags as long as two grains of rice, as thick as a toothpick - was merely a
way of restricting access to vaults that held sensitive data and images for
police
departments, a layer of security beyond key cards and clearance codes, the
company said.
“
To protect high-end secure data, you use more sophisticated techniques,” Sean
Darks, chief executive of the Cincinnati-based company, said. He compared chip
implants to retina scans or fingerprinting. “There’s a reader outside
the door; you walk up to the reader, put your arm under it, and it opens the
door.”
Innocuous? Maybe.
But the news that Americans had, for the first time, been injected with electronic
identifiers to perform their jobs fired up a debate over the proliferation
of ever-more-precise tracking technologies and their ability to erode privacy
in
the digital age.
To some, the microchip was a wondrous invention - a high-tech helper that
could increase security at nuclear plants and military bases, help authorities
identify
wandering Alzheimer’s patients, allow consumers to buy their groceries,
literally, with the wave of a chipped hand.
To others, the notion of tagging people was Orwellian, a departure from centuries
of history and tradition in which people had the right to go and do as they
pleased without being tracked, unless they were harming someone else.
Chipping, these critics said, might start with Alzheimer’s patients
or Army Rangers, but would eventually be suggested for convicts, then parolees,
then sex offenders, then illegal aliens - until one day, a majority of Americans,
falling into one category or another, would find themselves electronically
tagged.
Thirty years ago, the first electronic tags were fixed to the ears of cattle,
to permit ranchers to track a herd’s reproductive and eating habits.
In the 1990s, millions of chips were implanted in livestock, fish, pets, even
racehorses.
Microchips are now fixed to car windshields as toll-paying devices, on “contactless” payment
cards (Chase’s “Blink,” or MasterCard’s “PayPass”).
They’re embedded in Michelin tires, library books, passports and, unbeknownst
to many consumers, on a host of individual items at Wal-Mart and Best Buy.
But CityWatcher.com employees weren’t appliances or pets: They were people,
made scannable.
“
It was scary that a government contractor that specialized in putting surveillance
cameras on city streets was the first to incorporate this technology in the workplace,” says
Liz McIntyre, co-author of “Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government
Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID.”
Darks, the CityWatcher.com executive, said his employees volunteered to be
chipped. “You
would think that we were going around putting chips in people by force,” he
told a reporter, “and that’s not the case at all.”
Yet, within days of the company’s announcement, civil libertarians and
Christian conservatives joined to excoriate the microchip’s implantation
in people.
“
Ultimately,” says Katherine Albrecht, a privacy advocate who specializes
in consumer education and RFID technology, “the fear is that the government
or your employer might someday say, ‘Take a chip or starve.’”
Some critics saw the implants as the fulfillment of a biblical prophecy that
describes an age of evil in which humans are forced to take the “Mark of
the Beast” on their bodies, to buy or sell anything. Others saw it as
a big step toward the creation of a Big-Brother society.
“
We’re really on the verge of creating a surveillance society in America,
where every movement, every action - some would even claim, our very thoughts
- will be tracked, monitored, recorded and correlated,” says Barry Steinhardt,
director of the Technology and Liberty Program at the American Civil Liberties
Union in Washington, D.C.
In design, the tag is simple: A medical-grade glass capsule holds a silicon
computer chip, a copper antenna and a “capacitor” that transmits
data stored on the chip when prompted by an electromagnetic reader.
Implantations are quick, relatively simple procedures. After a local anesthetic
is administered, a large-gauge, hypodermic needle injects the chip under the
skin on the back of the arm, midway between the elbow and the shoulder.
John Halamka, an emergency physician at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
in Boston got chipped two years ago, “so that if I was ever in an accident,
and arrived unconscious or incoherent at an emergency ward, doctors would identify
me and access my medical history quickly.” (A chipped person’s
medical profile can be continuously updated, since the information is stored
on a database
accessed via the Internet.)
But it’s also clear to Halamka that there are consequences to having an
implanted identifier. “My friends have commented to me that I’m ‘marked’ for
life, that I’ve lost my anonymity. And to be honest, I think they’re
right.”
Indeed, as microchip proponents and detractors readily agree, Americans’ mistrust
of microchips and technologies like RFID runs deep. Many wonder:
Do the current chips have global positioning transceivers that would allow
the government to pinpoint a person’s exact location, 24-7? (No; the technology
doesn’t yet exist).
But could a tech-savvy stalker rig scanners to video cameras and film somebody
each time they entered or left the house? (Quite easily, though not cheaply.
Currently, readers cost $300 and up.)
What’s the average lifespan of a microchip? (About 10-15 years.) What
if you get tired of it before then - can it be easily, painlessly removed?
(Short
answer: No.)
How about thieves? Could they make their own readers, aim them at unsuspecting
individuals, and surreptitiously pluck people’s IDs out of their arms?
(Yes. There’s even a name for it - “spoofing.”)
The company that makes implantable microchips for humans, VeriChip Corp.,
of Delray Beach, FL, concedes that’s a problem - even as it markets its
radio tag and its portal scanner as imperatives for high-security buildings,
such as
nuclear power plants.
“
To grab information from radio frequency products with a scanning device is not
hard to do,” Scott Silverman, the company’s chief executive, says.
However, “the chip itself only contains a unique, 16-digit identification
number. The relevant information is stored on a database.”
VeriChip Corp., whose parent company has been selling radio tags for animals
for more than a decade, has sold 7,000 microchips worldwide, of which about
2,000 have been implanted in humans.
The company’s present push: tagging of “high-risk” patients
- diabetics and people with heart conditions or Alzheimer’s disease.
In an emergency, hospital staff could wave a reader over a patient’s arm,
get an ID number, and then, via the Internet, enter a company database and pull
up the person’s identity and medical history.
To doctors, a “starter kit” - complete with 10 hypodermic syringes,
10 VeriChips and a reader - costs $1,400. To patients, a microchip implant means
a $200, out-of-pocket expense to their physician. Presently, chip implants aren’t
covered by insurance companies, Medicare or Medicaid.
For almost two years, the company has been offering hospitals free scanners,
but acceptance has been limited. According to the company, 515 hospitals have
pledged to take part in the VeriMed network, yet only 100 have actually been
equipped and trained to use the system.
Some wonder why they should abandon noninvasive tags such as MedicAlert,
a low-tech bracelet that warns paramedics if patients have serious allergies
or a chronic
medical condition.
“
Having these things under your skin instead of in your back pocket - it’s
just not clear to me why it’s worth the inconvenience,” says Westhues.
Silverman responds that an implanted chip is “guaranteed to be with you.
It’s not a medical arm bracelet that you can take off if you don’t
like the way it looks...”
In fact, microchips can be removed from the body - but it’s not like
removing a splinter.
The capsules can migrate around the body or bury themselves deep in the arm.
When that happens, a sensor X-ray and monitors are needed to locate the chip,
and a plastic surgeon must cut away scar tissue that forms around the chip.
The relative permanence is a big reason why Marc Rotenberg, of the Electronic
Privacy Information Center, is suspicious about the motives of the company,
which charges $20 a year for customers to keep on its database a record of
blood type,
allergies, medications, driver’s license data and living-will directives.
For $80 a year, it will keep an individual’s full medical history.
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