Website review: RFIDKills.com
cygnoir discovered this in Liberties/Rights
•20 reviews since Mar 28, 2005
liberties, rfid, liberties-rights
•rfidkills.com
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Reviews of this website

cygnoir discovered 40 months ago- This site seems a little alarmist, but is interesting food for thought.

- virgio rated 2 weeks ago
- HP, Samsung, Phillips. All produce RFID. Gee, I wonder why the government -really- wants to use them?

TheSarah rated 8 weeks ago- Glad to see others are concerned about this for reasons other than religion. Maybe that'll help keep it at bay for awhile. Don't let them turn us into to barcodes anymore than they already have.

- largeGROUCH rated 5 months ago
- RFID Passports: Not Dead Yet State Dept Adds Protections But Still Clings To RFID Fantasy Frank E. Moss, Deputy Assistant Secretary Of State For Passport Services, days after denouncing RFID passport security concerns as "poppycock", admits RFID passports have a problem - the first step toward recovery. A battle in the war against RFID beacons in US passports has been won. The State Department now admits that their previous RFID proposal would put Americans at risk and is now considering other options. That's the good news. The bad news is that the State Department continues to blindly cling to the false promise of planting RFID chips in passports. In order to make RFID technology safer, the State Department claims to be planning two things. First, they say will put a metallic lining inside RFID passport covers -- a tinfoil hat, so to speak -- to prevent the passport from being snooped when closed. In addition, they claim the RFID chip itself will be encrypted so that it cannot be read when the passport is open: the chip will only broadcast your personal information once it's been swiped through an optical reader. Earth to State Department: if you're going to manually scan our passports, why bother using RFID?

flimsysanity rated 8 months ago- You won't be able to get in or out.

tjorsch rated 20 months ago
- April 13, 2007 - North Dakota bans forced RFID chipping
- December 26, 2006 - How to disable your passport's RFID chip
- November 17, 2006 - Cracked it!
- September 28, 2006 - U.S. deploys first e-Passport readers
- August 13, 2006 - Chipped Passports Coming Monday
- June 12, 2006 - Wisconsin law bars forced RFID implants
Originaly posted May 1, 2005
Information on the State Department's attempt to implant RFID's (Radio Frequency IDentification chips) into passports.
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jasonmckinsey rated 29 months ago- interesting, that such an evangelical administration would want us affixed with the mark of the beast, aint it?

LostWolf rated 29 months ago- From the page: "RFID Passports: Not Dead Yet State Dept Adds Protections But Still Clings To RFID Fantasy"

JohnSmallberries rated 32 months ago- Just because you are paranoid, doesn't mean they aren't after you.

Laukev7 rated 33 months ago- I'm getting tired of reviewers who whine that people are being paranoid because they're concerned about their privacy. George Orwell didn't write 1984 just for fun, you know. If someone had enough imagination to write a novel to warn us, then there is bound to be some sinister people out there with just as much imagination who would act upon it if given the opportunity.