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RFID Chips are beckons for tracking purposes, controlled by a microprocessor, They use power from the initial radio signal to transmit their response. and the use of a digital satellite.
The Government and Corporations are gathering information about your personal life and your habits and they want to track your purchases, your medial records, food products, cars, homes, even your relationship with other peoples. Thru administrations ( id ) chips, id cards, chipped implants, animals chipped for there policies, with new technologies, they will eliminate your God giving rights to complete privacy. Towns are under order to use there id identification cards, cameras, to watch the peoples to control them. The beast system is here, U. N. Nation controls a Religious and Political system that is controlled by the children of the devil.
Matthew 23:2 Saying The scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat: The law givers of today
Supermarket cards and retail surveillance devices are merely the opening
volley of the marketers' war against consumers. If consumers fail to
oppose these practices now, our long-term prospects may look like
something from a dystopian science fiction novel.
A new consumer goods tracking system called Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID) is poised to enter all of our lives, with profound
implications for consumer privacy. RFID couples radio frequency (RF)
identification technology with highly miniaturized computers that enable
products to be identified and tracked at any point along the supply
chain.
The system could be applied to almost any physical item, from ballpoint
pens to toothpaste, which would carry their own unique information in
the form of an embedded chip. The chip sends out an identification
signal allowing it to communicate with reader devices and other products
embedded with similar chips.
Analysts envision a time when the system will be used to identify and
track every item produced on the planet.
A number for every item on the planet
RFID employs a numbering scheme called EPC (for "electronic product
code") which can provide a unique ID for any physical object in the
world. The EPC is intended to replace the UPC bar code used on products
today.
Unlike the bar code, however, the EPC goes beyond identifying product
categories, it actually assigns a unique number to every single item
that rolls off a manufacturing line. For example, each pack of
cigarettes, individual can of soda, light bulb or package of razor
blades produced would be uniquely identifiable through its own EPC
number.
Once assigned, this number is transmitted by a radio frequency ID tag
(RFID) in or on the product. These tiny tags, predicted by some to cost
less than 1 cent each by 2004, are "somewhere between the size of a
grain of sand and a speck of dust." They are to be built directly into
food, clothes, drugs, or auto-parts during the manufacturing process.
Receiver or reader devices are used to pick up the signal transmitted by
the RFID tag. Proponents envision a pervasive global network of millions
of receivers along the entire supply chain in airports, seaports,
highways, distribution centers, warehouses, retail stores, and in the
home. This would allow for seamless, continuous identification and
tracking of physical items as they move from one place to another,
enabling companies to determine the whereabouts of all their products at
all times.
Steven Van Fleet, an executive at International Paper, looks forward to
the prospect. "We'll put a radio frequency ID tag on everything that
moves in the North American supply chain," he enthused recently.
The ultimate goal is for RFID to create a "physically linked world" in
which every item on the planet is numbered, identified, catalogued, and
tracked. And the technology exists to make this a reality. Described as
"a political rather than a technological problem," creating a global
system "would . . . involve negotiation between, and consensus among,
different countries." Supporters are aiming for worldwide acceptance of
the technologies needed to build the infrastructure within the next few
years
Since the Auto-ID Center's founding at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) in 1999, it has moved forward at remarkable speed. The
center has attracted funding from some of the largest consumer goods
manufacturers in the world, and even counts the Department of Defense
among its sponsors. In a mid-2001 pilot test with Gillette, Philip
Morris, Procter & Gamble, and Wal-Mart, the center wired the entire city
of Tulsa, Oklahoma with radio-frequency equipment to verify its ability
to track RFID equipped packages.
Though many RFID proponents appear focused on inventory and supply chain
efficiency, others are developing financial and consumer applications
that, if adopted, will have chilling effects on consumers' ability to
escape the oppressive surveillance of manufacturers, retailers, and
marketers. Of course, government and law enforcement will be quick to
use the technology to keep tabs on citizens, as well.
The European Central Bank is quietly working to embed RFID tags in the
fibers of Euro banknotes by 2005. The tag would allow money to carry its
own history by recording information about where it has been, thus
giving governments and law enforcement agencies a means to literally
"follow the money" in every transaction. If and when RFID devices are
embedded in banknotes, the anonymity that cash affords in consumer
transactions will be eliminated.
Hitachi Europe wants to supply the tags. The company has developed a
smart tag chip that--at just 0.3mm square and as thin as a human hair
can easily fit inside of a banknote. Mass-production of the new chip
will start within a year.
Consumer marketing applications will decimate privacy
"Radio frequency is another technology that supermarkets are already
using in a number of places throughout the store. We now envision a day
where consumers will walk into a store, select products whose packages
are embedded with small radio frequency UPC codes, and exit the store
without ever going through a checkout line or signing their name on a
dotted line. Jacki Snyder, Manager of Electronic Payments for Supervalu
(Supermarkets), Inc., and Chair, Food Marketing Institute Electronic
Payments Committee
RFID would expand marketers' ability to monitor individuals' behavior to
undreamt of extremes. With corporate sponsors like Wal-Mart, Target, the
Food Marketing Institute, Home Depot, and British supermarket chain
Tesco, as well as some of the world's largest consumer goods
manufacturers including Proctor and Gamble, Phillip Morris, and Coca
Cola it may not be long before RFID-based surveillance tags begin
appearing in every store-bought item in a consumer's home.
According to a video tour of the "Home of the Future" and "Store of the
Future" sponsored by Proctor and Gamble, applications could include
shopping carts that automatically bill consumers' accounts (cards would
no longer be needed to link purchases to individuals), refrigerators
that report their contents to the supermarket for re-ordering, and
interactive televisions that select commercials based on the contents of
a home's refrigerator.
Now that shopper cards have whetted their appetite for data, marketers
are no longer content to know who buys what, when, where, and how. As
incredible as it may seem, they are now planning ways to monitor
consumers' use of products within their very homes. RFID tags coupled
with indoor receivers installed in shelves, floors, and doorways, could
provide a degree of omniscience about consumer behavior that staggers
the imagination.
Consider the following statements by John Stermer, Senior Vice President
of eBusiness Market Development at ACNielsen:
After bar codes the next 'big thing' was frequent shopper cards. While
these did a better job of linking consumers and their purchases, loyalty
cards were severely limited...consider the usage, consumer demographic,
psychographic and economic blind spots of tracking data. something more
integrated and holistic was needed to provide a ubiquitous understanding
of on- and offline consumer purchase behavior, attitudes and product
usage. The answer: RFID (radio frequency identification) technology. In
an industry first, RFID enables the linking of all this product
information with a specific consumer identified by key demographic and
psychographic markers. Where once we collected purchase information, now
we can correlate multiple points of consumer product purchase with
consumption specifics such as the how, when and who of product use.
Marketers aren't the only ones who want to watch what you do in your
home. Enter again the health surveillance connection. Some have
suggested that pill bottles in medicine cabinets be tagged with RFID
devices to allow doctors to remotely monitor patient compliance with
prescriptions.
While developers claim that RFID technology will create "order and
balance" in a chaotic world, even the center's executive director, Kevin
Ashton, acknowledges there's a "Brave New World" feel to the technology.
He admits, for example, that people might balk at the thought of police
using RFID to scan the contents of a car's trunk without needing to open
it. The Center's co-director, Sanjay E. Sarma, has already begun
planning strategies to counter the public backlash he expects the system
will encounter.
http://www.digitalangelcorp.com
http://www.universalmicrochip.com
The government Agency's of the earth are tracking your ever move to bring in a one world system to rule over man.
RFID chips in the postal system
Tracking devices in color printers
RFID chips in wal mart products
This site was last updated 08/05/2010
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