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Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID
 
 
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Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID [Hardcover]

Katherine Albrecht , Liz McIntyre
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Nelson Current (10 Dec 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1595550208
  • ISBN-13: 978-1595550200
  • Product Dimensions: 24.2 x 16 x 2.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 327,360 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Synopsis

RFID, which stands for Radio Frequency Identification, is a technology that uses computer chips smaller than a grain of sand to track items from a distance. And as this mind-blowing book explains, plans and efforts are being made now by global corporations and the U.S government to turn this advanced technology, these spychips, into a way to track our daily activities - and keep us all on Big Brother's short leash. Compiling massive amounts of research with firsthand knowledge, "Spychips" explains RFID technology and reveals the history and future of the master planners' strategies to imbed these trackers on everything - from postage stamps to shoes to people themselves - and spy on Americans without our knowledge or consent. It also urgently encourages consumers to take action now - to protect their privacy and civil liberties before it's too late.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Great reading 19 Sep 2009
Format:Hardcover
Katherine Albrecht has done a superb job in documenting the relentless drive of Governments and Corporations in collecting more and more data about all our lives. She details the uses to which this information is put now, and may be put in the future.

Recent technology such as RFID, which is about to become big news, is explained in simple yet comprehensive terms. Albrecht questions the lack of consumer participation or knowledge of some of the tracking schemes, but also details cases where citizens have successfully fought back.

I feel this book can only become more relevant in the coming years, and is an excellent primer on how we are giving away our privacy and anonymity to faceless and unaccountable businessmen and bureaucrats.
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109 of 133 people found the following review helpful
Disturbing book - paints a pattern of privacy abuse. 30 Sep 2005
By Stuart Gardner - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This book covers, in detail, the existing use of RF technology to violate consumer privacy. RF chips are small and innocuous. RF chips can easily be seen as a benign technology if used appropriately (for example to reduce shoplifting by enhancing loss protection capabilities of retail stores and improved stock management).

The authors have identified numerous examples of multinational companies misusing RF chip technology.

The research behind this book appears both thorough and comprehensive. The use of statements lifted from patents really helps the authors make their case that these chips are likely to be put to use in ways the majority of us would find disturbing if not repugnant.

Negatives: the style of writing is very sensationalist. The mix of editorial comment and research lessons the impact of some of the material presented. The material sometimes lacks context: almost any technology can be abused. Also, in some instances loss of privacy may be a reasonable trade off for improved service/protection.

Also, RF Chips are not a unique risk (add data mining, "smart" chips and even car electronics - e.g. the chip that operates airbags,in some models, will record the impact speed of an accident).

The book draws on examples from around the World. US consumers have more to worry about than Canada, Australia and Europe where there is at least some protection from data protection legislation. US Privacy legislation lags behind (could this possibly be the result of lobbying by corporate political action committees?).

The bottom line is that the authors are right to raise a very loud warning to act on misuse of this technology, before it is too late.
58 of 71 people found the following review helpful
Terrifying facts; brilliant delivery 27 Sep 2005
By Claire Wolfe - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
RFID chips are tiny tracking devices that can be attached to or embedded in nearly anything -- and ultimately will be if industry and governments have their way. They broadcast information about an item and its possessor to any device capable of "pinging" them.

If we don't prevent it, these devices will soon be used to track and control everyone from cradle to grave.

As a privacy activist, I thought I'd been watching RFID implementation closely. But I didn't know the half of what Katherine and Liz reveal in Spychips.

The authors have dug deep into the files of the U.S. patent office. They've attended RFID industry conferences as "moles." They've traveled to Europe and throughout the U.S., uncovering RFID chips -- and disingenuous spin about RFID chips -- in unexpected places.

From this voluminous research and years of activism (Katherine is the founder and head of the privacy group CASPIAN and Liz is its communications director) they've produced a slender, info-packed, and yet highly readable -- and reasonably priced -- hardbound book.

I really must stress, and stress again, that word "readable." Spychips is about a truly frightening topic and a highly technical one, as well. But the book is lucid, concise, witty and at times reads like a novel. Call it a technological thriller.

It is also impeccably factual. You can rely on the info you'll get here. And I hope millions WILL rely on it. If we're to have any hope of preserving privacy and freedom in the future, we must ALL know what Katherine and Liz tell us so eloquently.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Compelling, but a bit too self-aggrandizing 10 Jan 2006
By Troy Marketing Associates - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
This topic is arguably one of the top 2 or 3 most important in the area of Privacy, and certainly a top topic in the business ethics area, although Ms. Albrecht would probably say the term "Business Ethics" is an immediate contradiction in terms.

As a marketing educator, I have placed this book on my syllabus for an E-Commerce course I teach, with the following reservation - it is entirely too celebratory of the author. IMO, this book was written with a self-promotional Erin Brockovich overlay I found off target. Its impact would be greater if it stuck to the facts, which are compelling and striking.

As an ex-Corporate marketer, I found Ms. Albrecht's methodology of tracking company's actual patents (IBM, Motorola, etc.), versus their reactive 'positioning statements', a very useful technique for cutting through the Corporate double-speak, especially when it related to corporate denials of consumer level tracking, when their own patent applications are directly FOR such applications.

As for the content, while some reviewers here poo-poo the 30 to 50 foot range of reading individual product 'spy chips' on clothing using today's technology, I think the range is perfectly adequate for trucks driving by most neighborhoods taking readings off such chips - just as many gas, water and electric meters are read today, as utilities change to RFID devices from manual reading. And the history of technology is that the the ranges and accuracy will improve.

What I take from this book is as follows. RFID, while very useful at the "Supply Chain"/pallet level in increasing distribution efficiency and effectiveness, is very troubling when applied to consumer level packaging. It is worse still when applied at the identity card (passport, member card, and drivers license)level, and we must tread carefully there.

In America, citizens and consumers should have a choice in being on or off 'the grid', it is fundamentally no one's business how products are used, or where you are located. This is why as marketers we use proxies such as research surveys to gather voluntary information on use patterns, and why we are trained in statistical inference. Even the non-voluntary current scanner data does not track you outside the purchase area.

This is an important issue that will not be resolved quickly.
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