Posted on 05/08/2006 7:26:46 PM PDT by MissAmericanPie
SPYCHIPPED LEVI'S BRAND JEANS HIT THE U.S. Levi Strauss Confirms RFID Test, Refuses to Disclose Location
It may be time to ditch your Dockers and lay off the Levi's, say privacy activists Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre. New information confirms that Levi Strauss & Co. is violating a call for a moratorium on item-level RFID by spychipping its clothing. What's more, the company is refusing to disclose the location of its U.S. test.
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is a controversial technology that uses tiny microchips to track items from a distance. These RFID microchips have earned the nickname "spychips" because each contains a unique identification number, like a Social Security number for things, that can be read silently and invisibly by radio waves. Over 40 of the world's leading privacy and civil liberties organizations have called for a moratorium on chipping individual consumer items because the technology can be used to track people without their knowledge or consent.
Jeffrey Beckman, Director of Worldwide and U.S. Communications for Levi Strauss, confirmed his company's chipping program in an email exhange with McIntyre, saying "a retail customer is testing RFID at one location [in the U.S.]...on a few of our larger-volume core men's Levi's jeans styles." However, he refused to name the location.
"Out of respect for our customer's wishes, we are not going to discuss any specifics about their test," he said. Beckman also confirmed the company is tagging Levi Strauss clothing products, including Dockers brand pants, at two of its franchise locations in Mexico.
McIntyre was tipped off to the activity by a mention in an industry publication. The article indicated Levi Strauss was looking for additional RFID "test partners."
Albrecht believes the companies are keeping mum about the U.S. test location in order to prevent a consumer backlash. Clothing retailer Benetton was hit hard by a consumer boycott led by Albrecht in 2003 when the company announced plans to embed RFID tags in its Sisley line of women's clothing. The resulting consumer outcry forced the company to retreat from its plans and disclaim its intentions.
Levi Strauss can little afford similar problems with consumers. It is one of the world's largest brand-name apparel marketers with a presence in more than 110 countries, but has suffered through several years of declining sales as younger consumers gravitate to new brands. The company has also been hurt by Wal-Mart's decision to cut back on inventory in a bid to shore up its own declining sales.
While Levi Strauss reports that its current RFID trials use external RFID "hang tags" that can be clipped from the clothes and the focus is on inventory management, not customer tracking, the company isn't guaranteeing how it will use RFID in the future.
"Companies like Levi Strauss are painting their RFID trials as innocuous," observes Albrecht. "But this technology is extraordinarily dangerous. There is a reason why we have asked companies not to spychip clothing. Few things are more intimately connected with an individual than the clothes they wear."
"Once clothing manufacturers begin applying RFID to hang tags, the floodgates will open and we'll soon find these things sewn into the hem of our jeans," Albrecht adds. "The problem with RFID is that it is tracking technology, plain and simple."
Albrecht and McIntyre point out that tracking people through the things they wear and carry is more than mere speculation. In their book "Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID," they reveal sworn patent documents that describe ways to link the unique serial numbers on RFID-tagged items with the people who purchase them.
One of the most graphic examples is IBM's "Identification and Tracking of Persons Using RFID-Tagged Items." In that patent application, IBM inventors suggest tracking consumers for marketing and advertising purposes.
"That's enough to steam most consumers," says McIntyre."But IBM's proposal that the government track people through RFID tags on the things they wear and carry should send a cold chill down our spines."
IBM inventors detail how the government could use RFID tags to track people in public places like shopping malls, museums, libraries, sports arenas, elevators, and even restrooms.
"Make no mistake," McIntyre adds. "Today's RFID inventory tags could evolve into embedded homing beacons. Unchecked, this technology could become a Big Brother bonanza and a civil liberties nightmare."Technically Speaking An Interview With Katherine Albrecht, Author & RFID Watchdog
Katherine Albrecht has been called the Erin Brockovich of RFID. She defines a consumer privacy expert, however, as someone who pays attention to the risks that consumers run when they go about their regular business. Albrechts actions would seem to back up her words. Shes the founder and director of CASPIAN (Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering), a consumer watchdog group that has more than 12,000 subscribers to its Web site (www.nocards.org) and representatives in all 50 states and 30 countries. Albrecht, whos finishing up a doctorate degree in consumer education at Harvard University, is also the co-author of Spychips: How Major Corporations And Government Plan To Track Your Every Move With RFID.
by Barry Brenesal
CPU: What is your main concern about RFID technology?
Albrecht: Its an incredibly powerful technology that easily lends itself to abuse. RFID readers can be placed invisibly in the environment. RFID tags can be placed on clothes and in peoples belongings. And maybe the most worrisome part is that the companies that are aiming to put the readers in the environment and the tags into peoples belongings have spelled out some pretty frightening plans for how they hope to abuse the technologyliterally to use it to spy on people.
CPU: What could RFID tagging track, for example?
Albrecht: Probably the best example is a patent from IBM called Identification and tracking of persons using RFID-tagged items. They filed it a few years back. IBM has been in on the RFID/EPC (Electronic Prod....
Never underestimate the power of paranoia to override reason. The RFID hysterics are certain the evil doers are going to use RFID track how many times they visit the loo in the last month and how often they visit the mother ship. To them, RFID technology represent the nexus of evil multinational corporations, privacy-invading government, and "mark -of-the beast" Satanic ritual perversion, all designed to sap and impurify our precious bodily fluids.
In short, these people are completely and utterly insane.
I'm a big supporter of insecticides, but I wouldn't recommend you pour them on your food.
LOL!!
Allegedly there are at least a couple in development.
billorites @ home...
ROFLOL
Freepers have the best comebacks. LOL
We need a group of Freepers to make all the comdey clubs, they would be a smash hit.
Just two or three seconds in the microwave, five seconds tops, will kill an RFID tag. However, some items may catch on fire, or be otherwise damaged (like, say, the new RFID passports that will be issued after this October).
Like I said.....500 degree oven for 20 minutes...
Nothing will catch on fire and you don't have to worry about metal in the microwave....
Sounds like a good title for a movie, "Spies in my Pants".
In the Year of Darkness, 2029, the rulers of this planet devised the ultimate plan. They would reshape the Future by changing the Past. The plan required something that felt no pity. No pain. No fear. Something unstoppable. They created 'THE DENIMATOR'
And what's to prevent the technosavvy spouse from installing after-market RFID?
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm?
LOL, I'll still call it "Spies In Your Pants"!!
Personally, I'm rather indifferent to RFID in things like jeans, but I definitely want to kill the RFID tag in the next U.S. passport I get after October 2006. There's no doubt I'll find a safe way that works without damaging the passport in any way that should matter, so the bigger question for me is whether authorities would invalidate the passport once the RFID tag doesn't work.
I don't know...
I wonder if it will be something that will work the first time you use it and then afterwards it never works...
MAYBE you could put a magnet over it or something.
And your once-blue jeans will be a nicely scorched brown.
Would a home pressure cooker reach a sufficiently high temperature to destroy silicon devices? No scorch, though it may be about four sizes smaller at the end of the process.
Yep, starting this October. I just sent off my application for a new passport, although there's still 4 years left before my old one expires, in the hope that I'll be able to use my new non-RFID passport through 2016.
Yep, starting this October. I just sent off my application for a new passport, although there's still 4 years left before my old one expires, in the hope that I'll be able to use my new non-RFID passport through 2016.
You'd have a hassle coming back, as well as going to any country that is also using the scanners.
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