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View Full Version : Veterinary Studies Show RFID Implants Can Trigger Cancer


ChristineMarie
October 10th, 2007, 07:04 AM
Radio frequency identification (RFID) implants can trigger malignant tumors in animals, according to mice studies cited by the Associated Press over the weekend. The report alleges that the Food and Drug Administration as well as the manufacturer were aware of the cancer-causing potential of these devices when they were approved in 2004.
An RFID tag is basically a microchip combined with an antenna in a compact package and is enabled to pick up signals from an RFID reader or scanner and then return the signal. These devices were touted to be innovative technologies that would allow medical records to be stored inside a person and accessed whenever and wherever needed. Additionally it was also thought that the RFID devices would allow medical professionals to track Alzheimer's patients in case they got lost.

http://www.newslocale.org/health/hnews/veterinary_studies_show_rfid_implants_can_trigger_ cancer_20070911451.html
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Lawmakers fight implanting of microchip tags in humans
The VeriChip implantable radio-frequency identification tag, made up of a microchip and an antenna encased in glass, is about the size of a grain of rice.

It would be an interesting feature of an employee's first day: Sign a contract, fill out a W2 and roll up your sleeve for your microchip injection.



Sounds like sci-fi, but it has happened, and now a handful of states are making sure their citizens never will be forced to have a microchip implanted under their skin.

If Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signs a bill passed this month, California would join Wisconsin and North Dakota in banning human implanting of the tags without consent. Lawmakers are calling the legislation preemptive; the industry that produces the technology calls the states' action fear mongering.

In Michigan, a bill introduced in the state House early this year would prohibit implanting a microchip in another person without consent; no action has been taken on the bill.

Radio-frequency identification, or RFID tags are in passports, in Wal-Mart factory shipments and in subway passes in cities from New York to Taiwan.

RFID tags are scanned at close range -- usually from a few feet to a few inches. The tags are tracked by scanners installed at checkpoints, such as office doors or warehouse loading docks.

In humans, the tags have been used to store medical information, to track movement and to gain access to locked rooms. To date, 2,000 RFID chips have been sold for human implantation, according to VeriChip Corp., the only manufacturer with a Food and Drug Administration-approved implantable chip.

Legislation deemed preemptive

The company is focusing its technology on medical patient identification, and about 400 patients, including those with Alzheimer's disease, have RFIDs. Other VeriChip human implants have been used by a Spanish nightclub to allow VIPs with implanted chips to bypass entrance lines and by the Mexico attorney general's staff to safeguard identity information at a time when the kidnapping of government officials there is not uncommon.

Ohio security firm CityWatcher.com raised eyebrows in 2006 when it requested that some of its employees be implanted with tags for access to certain rooms. CityWatcher.com has since shut down.

But forced chipping has been rare, leading some industry spokespeople to decry regulation as scare tactics.Legislators say the few laws being enacted are preemptive. Wisconsin state Rep. Marlin Schneider said he had never heard of CityWatcher.com when he drafted the first implant ban.

"I had heard about this device from CNN or some place, and I went into the office and said, 'Get a bill drafted that prohibits this,' " he said.

Technology's shortfall

State Sen. Joe Simitian, who authored the California bill, said he looked into RFID legislation after grade schools in Sutter County, Calif., required students to wear IDs containing the chips to help monitor attendance. The move prompted privacy complaints from parents, and the schools eventually stopped using the technology.

Simitian introduced four other RFID bills, dealing with criminal punishment for identity theft, security standards and use of the tags in driver's licenses and school IDs.

A May 2006 article in Wired magazine featured Jonathan Westhues, a 24-year-old engineer who showed how he could (and did) covertly scan a company's RFID employee badge and break into the office -- all with a cheap, homemade reader. He since has posted instructions on how to make the reader on his Web site.

Determined to show the security flaws to skeptics in the Legislature, Simitian asked a tech-savvy grad student from his office to build one.

The student then wandered the state Capitol one day with the reader in his briefcase. In the process, he stole the security numbers of nine representatives. The reader could send out any of those numbers, getting him past any locked door a state senator could access. And he would appear as the senator in the electronic records.
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070925/NEWS07/709250367/1009

Purplelinny
October 10th, 2007, 09:23 AM
Just like any anything else we put in (food/drink/tobacco etc.) or on (deodorant/cosmetics/lotions etc.) our bodies, it is not surprising that there is a cancer risk with RFID chips.

felixthecat
October 10th, 2007, 10:24 AM
I can easily believe that.

You do NOT put a foreign body, chip, in your pet. The ONLY time you should risk putting a foreign body of materail in your pet is for health reasons.

I've had cats for OVER 20 years. Most of them went outside. The ones that went outside NEVER, EVER, got "lost" or "stolen". NEVER! I am home when they are out and check up on them when they are out. I live in a development that backs up to a woods. The only cats you might consider expensive that we had was a Siamese and currently a Bengal. The rest have been adoptees - black, grey and cream tabby and orange tabbies.

This stuff about chipping your pets is ridiculous! Their trying to SCARE you into doing it. Again, having pets, cat specifically, NONE OF THEM EVER GOT LOST or was STOLEN or even hit by a car. You don't need to chip your pet. If a pet is happy with you, it won't get lost - they know a loving home too.

antsinmypants
October 10th, 2007, 10:42 AM
unfortunately, this is now becoming law in many states as well as overseas (if you are Military or otherwise moving overseas this is pertinent information) in places such as the EU.

I'm unsure if animals completely restricted to the home must have chips or not. I don't think my inlaws cats do...

felixthecat
October 10th, 2007, 10:50 AM
unfortunately, this is now becoming law in many states as well as overseas (if you are Military or otherwise moving overseas this is pertinent information) in places such as the EU.

I'm unsure if animals completely restricted to the home must have chips or not. I don't think my inlaws cats do...

I personally believe that starting out with pets, whom most of us love is a good stepping stone to HUMAN chip implantation. Take a listen,

"Now if you love your pets and chip them are you not more important that an animal? You could get lost or kidnapped?" Right?"

Of course I am playing devils advocate with that. I see NO reason to chip pets or humans. Chipping pets DESENSITIZES the idea to chip HUMANS. Look at the EMOTIONAL rationale I used? They'll do the same thing to get you on board to chip your kids, adults, soldiers etc.. Maybe I'm wrong but since MANY are EMOTIONALLY DRIVEN people and DO NOT THINK, they'll get away with this and you'll look like you don't care if you don't sign up for the chip - as their already doing if you don't want to chip your pet!

antsinmypants
October 10th, 2007, 11:08 AM
I know.. my parents and I have had the same conversation.

As for chipping, there's not been enough studies on the chips to merit animals having them implanted longterm, and they travel in the body.

ChristineMarie
October 11th, 2007, 08:01 AM
'united nations'

Embedding electronic tags in containers of food and supplies--and even in workers' identification documents--will "revolutionize" the way the United Nations doles out relief in the aftermath of the next tsunami, civil war or disease outbreak, a senior organization official said Wednesday.


David Nabarro, U.N.'s bird flu coordinator

(Credit: United Nations)When U.N. workers descend on distressed locales, they often encounter logjams at airport tarmacs and confusion over what exactly is in this or that box, said David Nabarro, who's chiefly in charge of coordinating responses to bird and human influenza for the U.N. Development Group.

Nabarro said he envisions his organization one day going the way of the military and companies like Wal-Mart, using radio-frequency identification (RFID) chips to track and trace those critical goods.

And ideally, even smarter chips could be used to send out signals that indicate what's happening inside a container--for instance, whether a box has been tampered with, knocked around in transit or subjected to high temperatures that could make food go sour.

"Effective RFI tracking and good inventory management software would make a huge difference in our ability to deal with relief (operations)," Nabarro told a group of U.S. bureaucrats and company representatives at an RFID event hosted here by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. (A number of companies, including SAP America, that sell RFID-related products, sponsored the event, so not surprisingly, it emitted a decidedly pro-RFID aura.)

The advent of RFID-laced passports and other travel documents
could also provide U.N. managers with a way to track staffers and other key non-U.N. personnel helping out on the scene, "particularly if they are sick and incapacitated," Nabarro added. (It wasn't exactly clear how this would work in practice, however, since RFID chips tend to have a finite zone in which they can be read remotely.)

Still, there are a number of obstacles to carrying out such a plan, Nabarro said. Because relief operations often occur in "worse than unspeakable" conditions (read: poor communications networks, nowhere to sleep or get food and nowhere to keep items cold or dry), it's risky to rely on anything that requires electricity, computers, dry conditions or clean air, he said. And in the case of a flu outbreak or other incident that puts lots of personnel out of commission, the systems must not be burdensome to use.

That means whatever RFID chips and readers are selected must be "incredibly robust" and simply designed. Oh, and inexpensive, of course.

"What I'm looking for," Nabarro told the audience, perhaps only half-joking, "is someone who can come and offer to us at exceedingly low cost...10,000 RFID tags and 100 scanners."

http://www.news.com/8300-10784_3-7-0.html?keyword=united+nations

ChristineMarie
October 11th, 2007, 08:06 AM
Korea/Japan Week: Five ways RFID is being used in mobile phones
If there's one thing I want to see in Korea and Japan, it's people slapping their mobile phones down and Doing Stuff with them. You know, paying for shopping, getting cans out of vending machines. That kind of thing. A visit to Korean operator SK Telecom's demo centre yesterday didn't disappoint.

They were showing some of the applications for RFID technology, and it made for an interesting selection. Starting with...

1. RFID Banking (left). Go up to an ATM, hold your phone against the special sensor, and receive cash and/or a statement without a debit card in sight. Apparently more than one million people are using the service in Korea now, paying a monthly fee for it.

2. CD Scanning. We used to be boggled by the idea of Japanese mobile users taking cameraphone snaps of QR codes to get information on CDs, books or print ads. Now SK Telecom is doing a similar thing with RFID. Hold your phone up against a product, and you'll receive information or a link - in the case of CDs, to listen to samples of the music. It also works with food, allowing you to scan a carton of milk to find out its history.

3. Taxi Lookups. So, you get into a cab in Seoul, and think the driver looks a bit dodgy. You can scan an ID thingy on the inside of the door, which gives you details about him and the cab - in case it crashes, or is stolen, and so on. I wonder if cabbies are likely to get the arse if they see you doing it...

4. Payment System. This is the more standard 'hold your phone next to an in-store reader to pay for goods' idea. It was impressive how slick and quick it was to work - no waving your phone about for three minutes trying to get a reading.

5. Vending Machine. Yep, SK Telecom is doing this too, letting you hold your phone up against the machine to get soft drinks. I love the way it says 'The mobile phone number of this vending machine is...' on the front. Maybe if you text it flirtatiously, it'll give you a free Coke. Or maybe not.

http://techdigest.tv/2007/10/koreajapan_week_14.html