tiger
New Member
Posts: 16
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Post by tiger on Nov 16, 2006 12:38:14 GMT -5
Another research on my own side: Chips RFID are incorporated by the multinationals in some their products to ensure the traceability of it. The chip then makes it possible to locate the product during its distribution, but also after its purchase. Chip RFID being identified at the time of the passage to the case of the supermarket, it can be associated the credit card or the cheque of the purchaser, and thus its identity. Each bought product becomes then a “electronic informer” who allows to locate his user. In addition on certain versions of the RFID, the drawings formed by the circuits of the chip are rather strange, with a kind of swastika, or a quadruple “Tau” (a symbol freemason which one finds in the excellent film “Equilibrium”). The chip was already used in particular by Gilette, “to trace” its disposable razors. It is manufactured by an American company called… Matrics, like by the Japanese companies NEC and Hitachi. It was invented by Gemplus, a French company repurchased by American investors. Chips RFID measure a little less than 1 millimeter. In spite of this miniaturization, they integrate a memory of 1 Kbit and an antenna which emits in the frequency band of the 2,5 GHz. Would you like Radio Frequency ID in your life & in your home without any assent? Tiger
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Post by thinker on Nov 16, 2006 23:20:32 GMT -5
Thanks, Tiger. Got a Gillette pkg right here. It's placed over-top part of the UPC code.
Free Speech TV and/or Democracy Now! have done good shows on RFID.
One thing I learned is that the manufacturer wants to follow the product from cradle-to-grave.
They said that in the near future, our trash will go to the landfill and be dumped out on a conveyer belt and everything run through an RFID reader so they know how long you kept the product and what you throw away.
Also, prescription bottles will have them, and money.
Consider you have a thug with a reader looking for drugs or money. He could read what's in a purse or pocket remotely.
And the IBM commercials for it look so innocent and pleasant. Wal-Mart is the biggest promoter of this - I think they've already implemented on their pallettes during distribution but they want to go down to the microscopic level of ID'ing everything.
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Post by thinker on Nov 16, 2006 23:21:39 GMT -5
Hmmmm. Let's see if RFID burns at a lower temp than fiber. LOL
Think I'll send it through the shredder.
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tiger
New Member
Posts: 16
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Post by tiger on Nov 17, 2006 0:00:04 GMT -5
Yeah good idea let me light up my little gas torch
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Post by whiterose on Dec 9, 2006 23:34:04 GMT -5
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