Ultra-groovy Lizzie pointed me to the BBC article on RFID’s march through Europe. It is a rather one-sided article; it reads more like an advertisement for RFID. If you haven’t already thought of the social consequences of increased tracking, you might benefit from a piece which educates readers on multiple frames of debate or one which warns readers of what they’ll lose in exchange for increased RFID proliferation.
First, we should ask if RFID has any role to play at all. But the article starts by framing the issue from a proponent’s perspective:
The European Commission is setting up a group made up of citizens, scientists, data protection experts and businesses to discuss how the tags should be used.
Why jump past the question of whether to use them at all? How about restricting their use to prevent any contact with a consumer, leaving RFID as an industrial tracking mechanism?
Shouldn’t any discussion of RFID require proponents to justify why anyone outside the shipping dock needs RFID (if indeed shipping docks need this at all), and not how they are to be used?
As RFID tags become smaller and less easily detected by the naked eye, countries want to put them into more things in order to track more of your interactions. One ought to be concerned about RFIDs implanted into cash and product packaging. So if you want anonymous cash, what effect would uniquely identifying every bill and coin have? What if cash registers were fitted with RFID scanners that could read RFID tags no larger than a couple of ridges on a human finger (0.05mm²) (which should be on the market soon), and those registers wirelessly conveyed the scanned information to a database somewhere on the Internet? Is this the world you want?