ho1ogram
01-05-2007, 07:57 AM
Received this email yesterday...
Hi, Everyone:
If you've read Spychips, you know that our worst consumer privacy
nightmare is for those little anti-theft tags (known in the industry as
"EAS" tags) to someday be combined with individually trackable RFID
chips and slipped into consumer products. (See Spychips Chp 4: "The Spy
in Your Shoe" for details.)
Well, those tags are now here.
An article in Friday's RFID Journal (posted below), reveals that
Checkpoint Systems has actually developed a product tag that combines
anti-theft and RFID tracking capabilities. The tags will debut this week
at the RFID Journal Live! Conference in Orlando, Florida. What's more,
Sensormatic, Checkpoint's only serious competitor, is running a whole
conference session to describe the benefits of using this combined
tracking technology.
This is beyond a doubt the #1 most important -- and dangerous --
development in the consumer privacy arena today. It means consumers may
soon be buying, wearing, and carrying products tagged with RFID at the
item level, because Checkpoint and Sensormatic specialize in hiding
anti-theft tags deep inside of products, then distributing those
products to nearly a million retail locations worldwide.
Now they want to do the same thing with RFID spychips. If they are not
stopped, Checkpoint and Sensormatic will soon be hiding these dual-use
tracking devices in your belongings, where they will be able to silently
and secretly transmit information about you to marketers, criminals, and
Big Brother.
This will be a consumer privacy nightmare -- and no one will even know
it's happening. That's because industry lobbyists have prevented RFID
labeling legislation from passing anywhere in the nation. There is no
requirement that retailers or manufacturers tell us when they're hiding
RFID tags in our clothes, shoes, books, or anything else.
Our only protection against this threat is the strength of our voices --
and the power of our protests.
Below is a list of relevant companies attending the RFID Journal Live
conference in Orlando this week. They will all be hearing from
Sensormatic and Checkpoint what a good idea it would be to start hiding
RFID tags in the individual items you buy. Please look over the list,
and if you see a company you buy from, tell them politely but firmly
that if you catch them using RFID at the item level you will not only
boycott their company, but you will tell everyone you know to boycott
them, too.
Companies attending the RFID Journal Live! Conference:
Academy Sports & Outdoors, Albertsons, The ALDO Group,
Anheuser-Busch, Best Buy, Blockbuster, Blommer Chocolate, Brass
Eagle, CDW Corp., Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream, Electrolux,
Energizer Battery, Fuji Photo Film USA, The Gap, General Mills,
Gillette Company, Hampton Products, Hasbro, Hershey Foods,
Hewlett Packard (HP), Hunter Fan, Hy-Vee, Inc., Jockey
International, Johnson & Johnson, Johnsonville Sausage, Kellogg
Co., Kimberly-Clark, Limited Brands, L'Oreal USA, Loblaws,
Louisville Bedding, Lowe's Companies, Luxottica Retail,
Maidenform Worldwide , Mars, Marubeni America, Masterfoods USA,
McIlhenny Co., Meyer Corp., Nestle USA, Newell Rubbermaid,
OfficeMax, Pacific Cycle, Payless Shoe Source, Pharmavite,
Procter & Gamble, S. C. Johnson, SAKS Inc., Sara Lee Foods,
Schick, Scott Paper Limited, Sears, Sears Canada,
Sherwin-Williams, Storekraft, Stride Rite Corp., Tanimura &
Antle, Target Corp., The Valvoline Co., Unilever, Wal-Mart,
Walgreens, Wm Wrigley Jr Co, Wegmans
[To learn more about the conference, and to see a video on it,
see: http://www.rfidjournalevents.com/live/ ]
Write to as many of these companies as you can, and cc: us on your
emails. Let them know how strongly you oppose RFID spychips. When you're
done writing an email, call their customer service lines for good
measure. Send a fax, write snail mail, send a singing telegram. But
whatever you do, don't take this lying down. We're counting on you to
put a stop to this.
And because they just don't seem to get it, here's a special message for
our friends in retail and consumer product manufacturing who may think
now is a good time to start spychipping products.
I strongly suggest you reconsider.
Item-level RFID tagging of consumer products is simply unacceptable. It
was not acceptable in 2003 when we launched boycotts against Benetton
and GIllette for running trials, nor when we exposed the Auto-ID
Center's confidential (and very incriminating) PR plans. It was not
acceptable when we sued the nation's largest conference center for
interfering with our right to protest the launch of the EPC network. It
was not acceptable in 2004 when we outed Metro's spychip-laced loyalty
card and sparked outrage across Germany. It was not acceptable in 2005
when we launched a boycott against Tesco, Britain's largest retail
chain, live on BBC television.
Item-level tagging was not acceptable when we outed the entire industry
(including IBM's "person tracking unit" ) in our award-winning book,
Spychips, which hit the top ten Amazon nonfiction bestseller list and
galvanized readers worldwide. It was not acceptable when we disclosed a
tagging trial by Levi Strauss and generated an avalanche of angry
letters. It was not acceptable when we demonstrated outside of Wal-Mart
stores in two states. Nor was it acceptable when we shamed American
Eagle Outfitters and American Express into publicly backing away from
their privacy-invading RFID customer tracking plans.
We've done over 2,000 television, print, and radio interviews in
virtually every media outlet in the world, and in every one we've
clearly said the same thing: Item-level RFID tagging is not
acceptable.
It's hard to be any clearer, but in the event there is anyone in the
industry who still doesn't get it, here is a promise. If any company
purchases dual EAS/RFID technology from Checkpoint Systems or
Sensormatic and places even one EAS/RFID tag on a single consumer item,
I will personally wage a worldwide campaign to expose and oppose you.
Hidden or not, we will find you out and hold you up to public scrutiny.
We trust you will do the right thing.
Meanwhile, may God bless and guide you all, and hold us all in His
wisdom, compassion and love.
In freedom,
Katherine Albrecht, Ed.D
================================================== ==========
Dr. Katherine Albrecht
Founder and Director, CASPIAN Consumer Privacy
kma@spychips.com
Co-author (with Liz McIntyre) of "SPYCHIPS: How Major Corporations and
Government
Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID"
http://www.spychips.com // http://www.nocards.org
Bio online at: http://www.spychips.com/media/katherine-albrecht.html
================================================== ==========
Checkpoint Combines EAS Tags With RFID
The labels contain both a Checkpoint 8.2 MHz RF antitheft inlay and an
EPC Gen 2 UHF RFID tag.
By Mary Catherine O'Connor, RFID Journal, April 27, 2007
http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/3280/
April 27, 2007—Checkpoint Systems unveiled today the Evolve product
family of labels, which marries RFID technology with Checkpoint's
electronic article surveillance (EAS) technology. Checkpoint developed
the dual-purpose labels to offer its retail customers a means of
leveraging RFID tools for in-store inventory visibility while continuing
to use the EAS tags as a theft deterrent—without having to apply two
separate tags to their products.
The Evolve labels contain a Checkpoint 8.2 MHz radio frequency (RF) EAS
inlay, which does not contain a microprocessor or carry a unique ID. The
inlay is designed to trigger an alarm if passed through an EAS reader
stationed around store exits unless first deactivated at the point of
purchase. The labels also contain an 850-950 MHz EPC Gen 2 RFID inlay,
to which an EPC can be encoded to identify and track individual
products.
The initial Evolve tag design, the Evolve 410, involves the placement of
an EAS antenna around the RFID inlay, containing an Impinj Monza chip on
an adhesive paper substrate. The label dimensions are slightly less than
2 inches square, enabling it to be attached to most hangtags for apparel
and footwear products.
"Before joining Checkpoint, I spent 20 years in the retail industry, and
whenever there's a big technology change, such as RFID, retailers face
so much [transition]. There's training staff, converting software, new
data to manage," says Checkpoint's CEO, George Off. "Anything that can
offer [retailers] flexibility [in adopting new technology] and enable
them to pace their investments really helps during these transitions.
That's what we're trying to do with Evolve."
Off says Checkpoint envisions working with retailers to incorporate
Evolve tags as part of CheckNet, the company's global logistics and data
communications platform. Retailers and their contract manufacturers can
use the system to order product tags—including Checkpoint's EAS tags—
that are applied to house-brand products at the point of manufacture.
This, in many cases, is done overseas.
Using the Evolve labels as part of the CheckNet platform, retailers and
manufacturers alike would be able to leverage the RFID tag applied to
products and track their movement through the supply chain—from the
factory down to the store level. "Retailers," says Off, "want both EAS
security and inventory tracking."
Presently, Checkpoint is still in the early stages of discussions
regarding incorporating Evolve product labels into the CheckNet
platform, Off says. To deploy such a system, Checkpoint would need to
develop a means by which the EPC encoded to the labels would be
generated, managed and shared with supply-chain partners. The required
RFID hardware infrastructure would also need to be put in place at
manufacturing and retail warehouses and facilities. To leverage the RFID
tags for inventory tracking inside retail stores, he adds, interrogators
would be needed in the back rooms, and possibly on store shelves and at
point-of-sale terminals as well.
=========================================
Conference Session RFID Journal Live! 2007
Item Level Tagging for Retail – Why Combining RFID and EAS Makes Sense
Wednesday, May 2, 11:30 am
ADT, primarily through its Sensormatic brand of EAS and CCTV products,
has decades of experience working with retailers to protect their
merchandise. Whether it’s a beep at the door or an image recorded to a
DVR, “visibility” created by physical layer deployments is at the heart
of ADT’s retail solutions. Item level RFID promises to offer new levels
of visibility related to both in-store and supply chain processes. And
while this new form of process visibility involves many integrated
layers, many of the physical layer challenges faced by retailers in
creating item level RFID tagging models have already been addressed.
This presentation will discuss the challenges retailers face in adopting
item level RFID tagging and offer lessons learned from years of
experience in providing similar EAS solutions.
Speaker:
Randy Dunn, Director, RFID Sales,
ADT Security Services
Takeaways:
.
Lessons learned from combining EAS
and RFID
.
Understanding the obstacles for
adopting item-level RFID tagging in
the retail sector
Source:
http://www.rfidjournalevents.com/live/level_expertise_executive_strategy.php
=========================================
ABOUT CASPIAN
CASPIAN (Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering)
is a grass-roots consumer group fighting retail surveillance schemes
since 1999 and irresponsible RFID use since 2002. With thousands of
members in all 50 U.S. states and over 30 countries worldwide, CASPIAN
seeks to educate consumers about marketing strategies that invade their
privacy and encourage privacy-conscious shopping habits across the
retail spectrum.
To join or support CASPIAN or to sign up for our mailing list, please
see:
http://www.spychips.com/get_involved.html
==========================================
================================================== ===================
CASPIAN: Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering
Opposing supermarket loyalty cards and other retail surveillance
schemes since 1999
http://www.spychips.com/
http://www.nocards.org/
You're welcome to duplicate and distribute this message to others who
may find it of interest.
================================================== ===================
To subscribe or unsubscribe to the Caspian-newsletter-l mailing list, click
the following link or copy and paste it into your browser:
http://mailman.nocards.org/mailman/listinfo/caspian-newsletter-l
If you have difficulty with the web-based interface, you may also
subscribe or unsubscribe via email by writing to:
admin@nocards.org
================================================== ===================
Hi, Everyone:
If you've read Spychips, you know that our worst consumer privacy
nightmare is for those little anti-theft tags (known in the industry as
"EAS" tags) to someday be combined with individually trackable RFID
chips and slipped into consumer products. (See Spychips Chp 4: "The Spy
in Your Shoe" for details.)
Well, those tags are now here.
An article in Friday's RFID Journal (posted below), reveals that
Checkpoint Systems has actually developed a product tag that combines
anti-theft and RFID tracking capabilities. The tags will debut this week
at the RFID Journal Live! Conference in Orlando, Florida. What's more,
Sensormatic, Checkpoint's only serious competitor, is running a whole
conference session to describe the benefits of using this combined
tracking technology.
This is beyond a doubt the #1 most important -- and dangerous --
development in the consumer privacy arena today. It means consumers may
soon be buying, wearing, and carrying products tagged with RFID at the
item level, because Checkpoint and Sensormatic specialize in hiding
anti-theft tags deep inside of products, then distributing those
products to nearly a million retail locations worldwide.
Now they want to do the same thing with RFID spychips. If they are not
stopped, Checkpoint and Sensormatic will soon be hiding these dual-use
tracking devices in your belongings, where they will be able to silently
and secretly transmit information about you to marketers, criminals, and
Big Brother.
This will be a consumer privacy nightmare -- and no one will even know
it's happening. That's because industry lobbyists have prevented RFID
labeling legislation from passing anywhere in the nation. There is no
requirement that retailers or manufacturers tell us when they're hiding
RFID tags in our clothes, shoes, books, or anything else.
Our only protection against this threat is the strength of our voices --
and the power of our protests.
Below is a list of relevant companies attending the RFID Journal Live
conference in Orlando this week. They will all be hearing from
Sensormatic and Checkpoint what a good idea it would be to start hiding
RFID tags in the individual items you buy. Please look over the list,
and if you see a company you buy from, tell them politely but firmly
that if you catch them using RFID at the item level you will not only
boycott their company, but you will tell everyone you know to boycott
them, too.
Companies attending the RFID Journal Live! Conference:
Academy Sports & Outdoors, Albertsons, The ALDO Group,
Anheuser-Busch, Best Buy, Blockbuster, Blommer Chocolate, Brass
Eagle, CDW Corp., Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream, Electrolux,
Energizer Battery, Fuji Photo Film USA, The Gap, General Mills,
Gillette Company, Hampton Products, Hasbro, Hershey Foods,
Hewlett Packard (HP), Hunter Fan, Hy-Vee, Inc., Jockey
International, Johnson & Johnson, Johnsonville Sausage, Kellogg
Co., Kimberly-Clark, Limited Brands, L'Oreal USA, Loblaws,
Louisville Bedding, Lowe's Companies, Luxottica Retail,
Maidenform Worldwide , Mars, Marubeni America, Masterfoods USA,
McIlhenny Co., Meyer Corp., Nestle USA, Newell Rubbermaid,
OfficeMax, Pacific Cycle, Payless Shoe Source, Pharmavite,
Procter & Gamble, S. C. Johnson, SAKS Inc., Sara Lee Foods,
Schick, Scott Paper Limited, Sears, Sears Canada,
Sherwin-Williams, Storekraft, Stride Rite Corp., Tanimura &
Antle, Target Corp., The Valvoline Co., Unilever, Wal-Mart,
Walgreens, Wm Wrigley Jr Co, Wegmans
[To learn more about the conference, and to see a video on it,
see: http://www.rfidjournalevents.com/live/ ]
Write to as many of these companies as you can, and cc: us on your
emails. Let them know how strongly you oppose RFID spychips. When you're
done writing an email, call their customer service lines for good
measure. Send a fax, write snail mail, send a singing telegram. But
whatever you do, don't take this lying down. We're counting on you to
put a stop to this.
And because they just don't seem to get it, here's a special message for
our friends in retail and consumer product manufacturing who may think
now is a good time to start spychipping products.
I strongly suggest you reconsider.
Item-level RFID tagging of consumer products is simply unacceptable. It
was not acceptable in 2003 when we launched boycotts against Benetton
and GIllette for running trials, nor when we exposed the Auto-ID
Center's confidential (and very incriminating) PR plans. It was not
acceptable when we sued the nation's largest conference center for
interfering with our right to protest the launch of the EPC network. It
was not acceptable in 2004 when we outed Metro's spychip-laced loyalty
card and sparked outrage across Germany. It was not acceptable in 2005
when we launched a boycott against Tesco, Britain's largest retail
chain, live on BBC television.
Item-level tagging was not acceptable when we outed the entire industry
(including IBM's "person tracking unit" ) in our award-winning book,
Spychips, which hit the top ten Amazon nonfiction bestseller list and
galvanized readers worldwide. It was not acceptable when we disclosed a
tagging trial by Levi Strauss and generated an avalanche of angry
letters. It was not acceptable when we demonstrated outside of Wal-Mart
stores in two states. Nor was it acceptable when we shamed American
Eagle Outfitters and American Express into publicly backing away from
their privacy-invading RFID customer tracking plans.
We've done over 2,000 television, print, and radio interviews in
virtually every media outlet in the world, and in every one we've
clearly said the same thing: Item-level RFID tagging is not
acceptable.
It's hard to be any clearer, but in the event there is anyone in the
industry who still doesn't get it, here is a promise. If any company
purchases dual EAS/RFID technology from Checkpoint Systems or
Sensormatic and places even one EAS/RFID tag on a single consumer item,
I will personally wage a worldwide campaign to expose and oppose you.
Hidden or not, we will find you out and hold you up to public scrutiny.
We trust you will do the right thing.
Meanwhile, may God bless and guide you all, and hold us all in His
wisdom, compassion and love.
In freedom,
Katherine Albrecht, Ed.D
================================================== ==========
Dr. Katherine Albrecht
Founder and Director, CASPIAN Consumer Privacy
kma@spychips.com
Co-author (with Liz McIntyre) of "SPYCHIPS: How Major Corporations and
Government
Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID"
http://www.spychips.com // http://www.nocards.org
Bio online at: http://www.spychips.com/media/katherine-albrecht.html
================================================== ==========
Checkpoint Combines EAS Tags With RFID
The labels contain both a Checkpoint 8.2 MHz RF antitheft inlay and an
EPC Gen 2 UHF RFID tag.
By Mary Catherine O'Connor, RFID Journal, April 27, 2007
http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/3280/
April 27, 2007—Checkpoint Systems unveiled today the Evolve product
family of labels, which marries RFID technology with Checkpoint's
electronic article surveillance (EAS) technology. Checkpoint developed
the dual-purpose labels to offer its retail customers a means of
leveraging RFID tools for in-store inventory visibility while continuing
to use the EAS tags as a theft deterrent—without having to apply two
separate tags to their products.
The Evolve labels contain a Checkpoint 8.2 MHz radio frequency (RF) EAS
inlay, which does not contain a microprocessor or carry a unique ID. The
inlay is designed to trigger an alarm if passed through an EAS reader
stationed around store exits unless first deactivated at the point of
purchase. The labels also contain an 850-950 MHz EPC Gen 2 RFID inlay,
to which an EPC can be encoded to identify and track individual
products.
The initial Evolve tag design, the Evolve 410, involves the placement of
an EAS antenna around the RFID inlay, containing an Impinj Monza chip on
an adhesive paper substrate. The label dimensions are slightly less than
2 inches square, enabling it to be attached to most hangtags for apparel
and footwear products.
"Before joining Checkpoint, I spent 20 years in the retail industry, and
whenever there's a big technology change, such as RFID, retailers face
so much [transition]. There's training staff, converting software, new
data to manage," says Checkpoint's CEO, George Off. "Anything that can
offer [retailers] flexibility [in adopting new technology] and enable
them to pace their investments really helps during these transitions.
That's what we're trying to do with Evolve."
Off says Checkpoint envisions working with retailers to incorporate
Evolve tags as part of CheckNet, the company's global logistics and data
communications platform. Retailers and their contract manufacturers can
use the system to order product tags—including Checkpoint's EAS tags—
that are applied to house-brand products at the point of manufacture.
This, in many cases, is done overseas.
Using the Evolve labels as part of the CheckNet platform, retailers and
manufacturers alike would be able to leverage the RFID tag applied to
products and track their movement through the supply chain—from the
factory down to the store level. "Retailers," says Off, "want both EAS
security and inventory tracking."
Presently, Checkpoint is still in the early stages of discussions
regarding incorporating Evolve product labels into the CheckNet
platform, Off says. To deploy such a system, Checkpoint would need to
develop a means by which the EPC encoded to the labels would be
generated, managed and shared with supply-chain partners. The required
RFID hardware infrastructure would also need to be put in place at
manufacturing and retail warehouses and facilities. To leverage the RFID
tags for inventory tracking inside retail stores, he adds, interrogators
would be needed in the back rooms, and possibly on store shelves and at
point-of-sale terminals as well.
=========================================
Conference Session RFID Journal Live! 2007
Item Level Tagging for Retail – Why Combining RFID and EAS Makes Sense
Wednesday, May 2, 11:30 am
ADT, primarily through its Sensormatic brand of EAS and CCTV products,
has decades of experience working with retailers to protect their
merchandise. Whether it’s a beep at the door or an image recorded to a
DVR, “visibility” created by physical layer deployments is at the heart
of ADT’s retail solutions. Item level RFID promises to offer new levels
of visibility related to both in-store and supply chain processes. And
while this new form of process visibility involves many integrated
layers, many of the physical layer challenges faced by retailers in
creating item level RFID tagging models have already been addressed.
This presentation will discuss the challenges retailers face in adopting
item level RFID tagging and offer lessons learned from years of
experience in providing similar EAS solutions.
Speaker:
Randy Dunn, Director, RFID Sales,
ADT Security Services
Takeaways:
.
Lessons learned from combining EAS
and RFID
.
Understanding the obstacles for
adopting item-level RFID tagging in
the retail sector
Source:
http://www.rfidjournalevents.com/live/level_expertise_executive_strategy.php
=========================================
ABOUT CASPIAN
CASPIAN (Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering)
is a grass-roots consumer group fighting retail surveillance schemes
since 1999 and irresponsible RFID use since 2002. With thousands of
members in all 50 U.S. states and over 30 countries worldwide, CASPIAN
seeks to educate consumers about marketing strategies that invade their
privacy and encourage privacy-conscious shopping habits across the
retail spectrum.
To join or support CASPIAN or to sign up for our mailing list, please
see:
http://www.spychips.com/get_involved.html
==========================================
================================================== ===================
CASPIAN: Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering
Opposing supermarket loyalty cards and other retail surveillance
schemes since 1999
http://www.spychips.com/
http://www.nocards.org/
You're welcome to duplicate and distribute this message to others who
may find it of interest.
================================================== ===================
To subscribe or unsubscribe to the Caspian-newsletter-l mailing list, click
the following link or copy and paste it into your browser:
http://mailman.nocards.org/mailman/listinfo/caspian-newsletter-l
If you have difficulty with the web-based interface, you may also
subscribe or unsubscribe via email by writing to:
admin@nocards.org
================================================== ===================