The social threat of tracking technologies
little brother | 09.02.2006 20:06 | Repression | Social Struggles | Technology
Largish RFID tag - they are getting smaller...
RFID tags in passports are supposed to be the next big thing for governments who want to be able to read ID and biometric data at a distance. Home Office Minister Andy Burnham, one of the MPs who is pushing forward Labour's plans for a national ID database and card in spite of widespead opposition, has admitted that contactless/proximity chips will soon be used in passports. This is supposedly intended to prevent identity theft and improve 'security', but a Dutch smartcard company has already managed to read a new Dutch RFID passport from 10 metres and cracked the encryption in 2 hours, revealing date of birth, facial image and fingerprint! If RFID is used in national identity cards, continuous tracking of entire populations is not that far away.
As reported last summer, in an Adsa/Walmart distribution depot in Wigan, warehouse workers are already being tracked continuously by RFID and told which goods to load up by a computer-voice through a headset they have to wear. Asda then used this tracking information in a 'time-and-motion' study and reckoned that workers could load 1400 cases per hour rather than 1100, for the same pay of course. This means 10 hours work is being done in an 8 hour shift, or put another way, 5 workers are now supposed to do the work of 6. Workers who can't meet these targets are 'let go', according to the GMB union. Workers have organised against this, which resulted in suspension of the union rep. and further industrial action. RFID can also be used to harass workers by monitoring toilet breaks etc.
Another tracking technology, global positioning systems (GPS), is an additional threat to the autonomy of mobile workers in buildings and on the road. This satellite-based tracking could soon extend to all drivers, as governments aim to have new vehicles fitted with GPS for taxing and 'pay-as-you' road tolls, so they say, but easily open to use or abuse by cops, insurance companies, or any public or private snooping body. Organisations like Friends of the Earth have actually welcomed road charging (presumably based on the possibility of pricing heavier vehicle users off the road) so putting environmental concerns above privacy, it seems.
And before we go, let's not forget the mobile phone. When your phone is on, it makes itself known to the nearest cell antennae. A company is already offering a service for people-tracking using this information.
Sources:
'RFID - a new technology for ID cards'
Anarchist Federation, Defending Anonymity pamphlet, Sept 2005
http://www.libcom.org/hosted/af/ace/anon.html#rfid
'RFID tag' - the rude words ID card ministers won't say
The Register, Monday 30th January 2006
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/01/30/burnham_rfid_evasions/
Face and fingerprints swiped in Dutch biometric passport crack
The Register, Monday 30th January 2006
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/01/30/dutch_biometric_passport_crack/
Asda/Walmart, Fighting the union-busters
The Socialist 23 - 29 June 2005
http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/2005/398/index.html?id=np10.htm
'Pay-as-you-go' road charge plan
BBC news website, Monday 6th June 2005
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4610755.stm
Mobile phone tracking, girlfriend stalking and the law
The Register, Thursday 2nd February 2006
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/02/02/mobile-phone_tracking/
little brother
Additions
Company now implanting RFID chips in workers
10.02.2006 15:31
10th Feb 2006.
"A Cincinnati video surveillance company CityWatcher.com now requires employees to use Verichip human implantable microchips to enter a secure data centre. Until now, the employees entered the data centre with a VeriChip housed in a heart-shaped plastic casing that hangs from their keychain." Read more at:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/02/10/employees_chipped/
automaton
Comments
Hide the following comment
Biometric ID cards will probably use RFID tags
11.02.2006 18:29
Last week however the Mirror grasped (albeit somewhat shakily) the import of this and deduced that "spy chips" in ID cards "carry radio transmitters" and will mean "law abiding citizens" will be tagged like criminals on parole." In its defence, the Mirror has managed to get to pretty much the right answer via a slightly esoteric route, and it does seem to have seen a letter from Burnham where he concedes that radio is somehow involved: "a travel document such as an identity will need to incorporate a 'contactless' or 'proximity' chip. This will require the card to use radio frequencies to allow the card to be read at a very short distance."
read all the article here http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/01/30/burnham_rfid_evasions/
zcat