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Spychipping

T3023

Well-known member
Dear CASPIAN Members and supporters:

I'm flying into Dallas today for a showdown in the Lone Star State.

It's time to take a stand against spychipping companies and their RFID
tagging activities, and Wal-Mart is at the top of our list. They've
begun brazenly selling RFID-tagged items right under the noses of Texas
shoppers, and it needs to stop.

We're organizing this weekend to send Wal-Mart a clear message:

"Don't mess with Texas! No Spychips in the Store!"

My Spychips co-author, Liz McIntyre, and I will be on hand to help local
CASPIAN members alert the public and the media to Wal-Mart's use of RFID
in stores. We will lead a rally outside of a Dallas Wal-Mart Super
Center Saturday to raise awareness of RFID and demand that the company
immediately stop selling spychipped products.

For more details, see:
http://www.spychips.com/protest/walmart/walmart-protest-details.html

Wal-Mart is the 800-pound gorilla of the retail industry, and other
retailers follow its lead. (We've just learned that Best Buy is
considering item-level RFID tagging for 2006. We're betting they'll
rethink those plans once they get hit with a consumer backlash of their
own!) By taking a stand now, we can prevent the spread of these tags.

I have organized five protests since I founded CASPIAN in 1999, and
every one has been a completely positive experience. People bring their
families, their golden retrievers, and their shared love of freedom, and
they leave with the satisfaction that only comes from taking a stand for
what's right. That's a lot in this increasingly apathetic world. And it
feels great.

We now have over 10,000 CASPIAN members around the world and plan to
work with local communities to organize similar events elsewhere. We
know you will prove us right when we say that Americans and people
everywhere else across the globe will fight back against big corporate
plans to number and track us all.

Let's show them that it won't be as easy as they think.

In freedom and with high hopes,

Katherine Albrecht
CASPIAN (Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering)
www.spychips.com // www.nocards.org
Co-author of "Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to
Track Your Every Move with RFID"

================================================== ===================
Background information about RFID Spychips

What are RFID spychips?

RFID stands for Radio Frequency IDentification. RFID uses tiny computer
chips, some smaller than a grain of sand, to track items from a
distance. Big business and big government want RFID chips to replace the
bar code. The chips can be embedded in ATM cards, sewn into the seams
of pants, or woven into shirt labels without their owners' knowledge.
The information on these chips can be read secretly, without your
permission, right through your purse, backpack or wallet.

Why Fight RFID?

Big business wants to use RFID to chip, number and track every item on
the planet -- every can of Coke, every car tire, every book, every
garment. They want to know where everything is at all times. By
association, they will be able to know very private details about the
people who buy, wear and interact with those products.

It's Already Started

Wal-Mart is already putting spychips on products. They've been caught
putting RFID tags in Lipfinity lipstick boxes, and just last week we
found an RFID tag on Hewlett-Packard printer/scanner packages in TEXAS!
You can see what we found by visiting our site at
http://www.spychips.com/protest/walmart/walmart-protest-details.html.

================================================== ===================

CASPIAN: Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering
Opposing supermarket "loyalty" cards and other retail surveillance
schemes since 1999

http://www.spychips.com/
http://www.nocards.org/

You're welcome to duplicate and distribute this message to others who
may find it of interest.

================================================== ===================
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If you have difficulty with the web-based interface, you may also
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================================================== ===================
__________________
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T3023

Well-known member
http://joelavin.com/spychips.html
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_424.shtml
http://boycottwalmart.meetup.com/23/
http://www.elfis.net/phorum/read.php?f=45&i=335&t=335
http://kosmosltd.net/05news/0083.htm
http://www.starbeacon.com/letters/local_story_096075105


RFID follow-up - US Passports will get RFIDed after all...
I was wrong in my treatment of RFID in the Mac ReviewCast review of SpyChips wherein I said that the US passport RFID issue was squashed:
http://www.maccompanion.com/ExpressionEngine1.2/index.php?/macCompanionModern/2005/11/24/

Revelation 13:16-17 And he causes all, the small and the great, and the rich and the poor, and the free men and the slaves, to be given a mark on their right hand or on their forehead, and he provides that no one should be able to buy or to sell, except the one who has the mark, either the name of the beast or the number of his name.
The highly recommended and definitive site on the internet about RFID is:

http://www.technoslavery.com/rfid.html
 

T3023

Well-known member
'Spychips' worth reading

Star Beacon



Well worth reading a book called Spychips. Very informative. Every American and just plain everybody should go out and buy this book and read it and then pass it on to a friend. "Big Brother" is watching our every move.

Just to name a few on the band wagon putting millions of dollars (our spending money) to use supporting the making and marketing of RFID (Radio Frequency Identification Data) tags to be micro-chipped (small as a grain of sand, highly undetectable) on each and every item made or bought and sold would be Proctor and Gamble, Gillette, Walmart, Kraft, Johnson & Johnson and IBM. Other companies to watch out for are Abercrombie & Fitch, Ameripride and Levis-Strauss.

Since 9/11 the government has gone full-force into monitoring our every move in the name of national security. Spychips will be pushed with the promise of a safer world.

We are moving right down the highway of a cashless society, using debit cards and charge cards like never before.

A slow, but surprisingly fast progression from spychipped drivers licenses, building access cards and student name tags to just name a few, all in the name of good. First, it will be to justify security measures. Spychipping prisoners, sex offenders and so on and on it will go. Next, will be the elderly, the military and government employees. Once in gear it will go full throttle. We need to slam on the brakes.

The new generation coming up is so tuned and caught up in the tech world. We see it everyday in everyway. Every new gadget is "cool" to them. From computers to lap tops, to cell phones to ipods the list goes on and on.

Before you go off thinking some crazed person wrote this book, please note the following. A woman whose name is Katherine Albecht, a Harvard doctoral researcher, wrote this book. A woman by the name of Liz McIntyre co-wrote it and she is a former bank examiner and CPA. Read the book for yourself before judging it as a fanatic book.
 

T3023

Well-known member
United States Patent 5,878,155
Heeter March 2, 1999

Method for verifying human identity during electronic sale transactions
Abstract
A method is presented for facilitating sales transactions by electronic media. A bar code or a design is tattooed on an individual. Before the sales transaction can be consummated, the tattoo is scanned with a scanner. Characteristics about the scanned tattoo are compared to characteristics about other tattoos stored on a computer database in order to verify the identity of the buyer. Once verified, the seller may be authorized to debit the buyer's electronic bank account in order to consummate the transaction. The seller's electronic bank account may be similarly updated.


Inventors: Heeter; Thomas W. (55 Lyerly, Houston, TX 77022)
Appl. No.: 709471
Filed: September 5, 1996

Current U.S. Class: 382/115
Intern'l Class: G06K 009/00
Field of Search: 382/115,116,124-127,100,128,133 348/77,15,161 209/3.3,555 356/71 340/825.34 235/379,380,382

References Cited [Referenced By]

What is claimed is:

1. A method of human identification to facilitate electronic sale transactions comprising the steps of:

providing identity information about a purchaser on a storage medium,

providing skin marking invisible ink,

applying said invisible ink to an appendage of said purchaser to form a tattoo on said purchaser,

storing characteristics about said tattoo on said storage medium to form stored characteristics about said tattoo, and

linking said identity information about said purchaser to said stored characteristics about said tattoo.

2. A method of human identification as in claim 1 further comprising the steps of:

providing financial information about said purchaser on said storage medium, and

linking said financial information about said purchaser to said identity information about said purchaser.

3. A method of human identification as in claim 1 further comprising the steps of:

providing financial information about said purchaser on said storage medium, and

linking said financial information about said purchaser to said stored characteristics about said tattoo.

4. A method of human identification as in claim 2 further comprising the steps of:

scanning said tattoo on said purchaser with a scanning device to obtain scanned characteristics of said tattoo on said purchaser,

comparing said scanned characteristics to characteristics about other tattoos found on said storage medium in order to determine if said scanned characteristics match said stored characteristics about said tattoo on said purchaser stored on said storage medium, and

only if said scanned characteristics match said stored characteristics then providing said linked identity information in order to verify the identity of said purchaser.

5. A method of human identification as in claim 4 further comprising the step of:

only if said scanned characteristics match said stored characteristics then providing said linked financial information in order to verify that said purchaser has sufficient funds to consummate a sales transaction.

6. A method of human identification as in claim 5 further comprising the step of:

only upon verification that said purchaser has sufficient funds to consummate said sales transaction then modifying said stored financial information about said purchaser to reflect a consummated sales transaction.

7. A method of human identification as in claim 3 further comprising the steps of:

scanning said tattoo on said purchaser with a scanning device to obtain scanned characteristics about said tattoo,

comparing said scanned characteristics to characteristics about tattoos stored found on said storage medium in order to determine if said scanned characteristics match said stored characteristics of said tattoo on said purchaser stored on said storage medium, and

only if said scanned characteristics match said stored characteristics then providing said linked financial information in order to verify that said purchaser has sufficient funds to consummate a sales transaction.

8. A method of human identification as in claim 7 further comprising the step of:

only upon verification that said purchaser has sufficient funds to consummate said sales transaction then modifying said stored financial information about said purchaser to reflect a consummated sales transaction.

9. A method of human identification as in claim 5 further comprising the steps of:

providing financial information about a seller on said storage medium, and

only upon verification that said purchaser has sufficient funds to consummate said sales transaction then modifying said stored financial information about said seller to reflect a consummated sales transaction.

10. A method of human identification as in claim 7 further comprising the steps of:

providing financial information about a seller on said storage medium, and

only upon verification that said purchaser has sufficient funds to consummate said sales transaction then modifying said stored financial information about said seller to reflect a consummated sales transaction.
 

Ben H

Well-known member
"Spychips" is the most rediculous, paranoid term for RFID I've ever heard. Let me guess, the metric system is an evil government conspiracy too. RFIDs have a very limited range. That little security tag that is allready on everything over $10 is an RFID. The big picture of RFID has some really nice applications. Refrigerators will start being able to generate shopping lists by scanning things going in and out. I don't know about you, but from what I've seen at Walmart only a fraction of the registers are used now that they've put people out of business, I hate waiting in line. With RFID you don't need to take anything out of your cart, scan the whole thing. The only information on these RFID tags is a number, like a barcode, that's it. That number matches up to the product information in their computer. You aren't going to stop it, you're wasting your time. I finished putting RFID tags in my herd this week. It won't be long before everyone will have to.
 

Cal

Well-known member
Ben H said:
"Spychips" is the most rediculous, paranoid term for RFID I've ever heard. Let me guess, the metric system is an evil government conspiracy too. RFIDs have a very limited range. That little security tag that is allready on everything over $10 is an RFID. The big picture of RFID has some really nice applications. Refrigerators will start being able to generate shopping lists by scanning things going in and out. I don't know about you, but from what I've seen at Walmart only a fraction of the registers are used now that they've put people out of business, I hate waiting in line. With RFID you don't need to take anything out of your cart, scan the whole thing. The only information on these RFID tags is a number, like a barcode, that's it. That number matches up to the product information in their computer. You aren't going to stop it, you're wasting your time. I finished putting RFID tags in my herd this week. It won't be long before everyone will have to.
You're absolutely right. T3023 can not be playing with a full deck.
 

T3023

Well-known member
Cal said:
Ben H said:
"Spychips" is the most rediculous, paranoid term for RFID I've ever heard. Let me guess, the metric system is an evil government conspiracy too. RFIDs have a very limited range. That little security tag that is allready on everything over $10 is an RFID. The big picture of RFID has some really nice applications. Refrigerators will start being able to generate shopping lists by scanning things going in and out. I don't know about you, but from what I've seen at Walmart only a fraction of the registers are used now that they've put people out of business, I hate waiting in line. With RFID you don't need to take anything out of your cart, scan the whole thing. The only information on these RFID tags is a number, like a barcode, that's it. That number matches up to the product information in their computer. You aren't going to stop it, you're wasting your time. I finished putting RFID tags in my herd this week. It won't be long before everyone will have to.
You're absolutely right. T3023 can not be playing with a full deck.


"Mark of the Beast" and you got it!
Revelation 19:20
 

BBJ

Well-known member
Up to this point there have been 7 posts made in this thread and 5 of them are from you T3023?????? :shock: It seems to be a reoccuring theme with you, everytime I see a topic by you I can bet the majority of the conversation is with yourself. :lol: :lol: :lol:



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