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citywatcher

Postby lifttheveil on Mon Oct 09, 2006 2:14 am

Another company to force workers to take the verichip implant is citywatcher, which raises many concerns due to the nature of the business.

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Never heard of Citywatcher?

Have a look at their website here -
http://www.citywatcher.com

The following article is from http://www.marketingimprovement.com

VeriChips Implanted at CityWatcher.com

Controversy has broken out over the VeriChip – a human implantable Radio Frequency ID (RFID) chip manufactured by the VeriChip Corporation – after reports that CityWatcher.com, a Cincinnati based security and surveillance corporation now requires employees to use VeriChip human implantable microchips to enter a secure data centre

The VeriChip is a glass encapsulated RFID tag that is injected into the flesh of the triceps area of the arm to uniquely number and identify individuals. The tag can be read through a person's clothing, silently and invisibly, by radio waves from a few inches away. The highly controversial device is being marketed as a way to access secure areas, link to medical records, and serve as a payment instrument when associated with a credit card.

According to Khary Williams – Network Administrator for CityWatcher.com - speaking to Liz McIntyre by phone yesterday, [McIntyre is co-author of "Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID," ] a local doctor has already implanted two of CityWatcher's employees with the VeriChip devices. "I will eventually" receive an implant, too, he added. In the meantime, Williams accesses the data centre with a VeriChip implant housed in a heart-shaped plastic casing that hangs from his keychain. He told McIntyre he had no qualms about undergoing the implantation procedure himself, and said he would receive an implant as soon as time permits.

"It worries us that a government contractor that specializes in surveillance projects would be the first to publicly incorporate this technology in the workplace," said McIntyre. CityWatcher provides video surveillance, monitoring and video storage for government and businesses, with cameras set up on public streets throughout Cincinnati .

The company hopes the VeriChip will beef up its proximity or "prox" card security system that controls access to the room where the video footage is stored, said Gary Retherford of Six Sigma Security, Inc., the company that provided the VeriChip technology. "The prox card is a system that can be compromised," said Retherford, referring to the card's well-known vulnerability to hackers. He explained that chipping employees "was a move to increase the layer of security....It was attractive because it could be integrated with the existing system."

Ironically, implantable tags may not provide CityWatcher with that additional safety, after all. Last month security researcher Jonathan Westhues demonstrated how the VeriChip can be skimmed and cloned by a hacker , who could theoretically duplicate an individual's VeriChip implant to access a secure area. Westhues, author of a chapter titled "Hacking the Prox Card" for Simson Garfinkel's recent "RFID: Applications, Security, and Privacy," said the VeriChip "is not good for anything" and has absolutely no security.

"No one I spoke with at Six Sigma Security or at CityWatcher knew that the VeriChip had been hacked," McIntyre observed. "They were also surprised to hear of VeriChip's downsides as a medical device. It was clear they weren't aware of some of the controversy surrounding the implant."

Although CityWatcher reportedly does not require its employees to take an implant to keep their jobs, Katherine Albrecht, "Spychips" co-author and outspoken critic of the VeriChip, says the chipping sets an unsettling precedent. "It's wrong to link a person's paycheck with getting an implant," she said. "Once people begin 'voluntarily' getting chipped to perform their job duties, it won't be long before pressure gets applied to those who refuse."

Albrecht predicts that news of the security flaws will combine with public squeamishness to make the VeriChip a hard product to sell, however. "Obviously, nobody wants their employer coming at them with a giant hypodermic needle. But when people realize it takes a scalpel and surgery to remove the device if it gets hacked, they'll really think twice," she said. "An implant is disgusting enough going in, but getting it out again is a bloody mess."

Albrecht and McIntyre, who are Christians, also have religious concerns about RFID chip implants. In their latest book, "The Spychips Threat: Why Christians Should Resist RFID and Electronic Surveillance," the pair explain how plans by global corporations and government entities to broadly deploy RFID could usher in a world that bears a striking resemblance to the one predicted in Revelation, the last book of the Bible.

According to Revelation, at some future point people will not be able to buy or sell unless they are numbered and bear a mark on their hand or forehead.

"While Christians have theological reasons to reject being uniquely numbered, this is an issue that should concern anyone who values privacy and civil liberties," said Albrecht. "The VeriChip is Big Brother technology being unscrupulously marketed by a company that would like to put a chip in every one of us. It has no place on free American soil."
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Postby lifttheveil on Sat Oct 21, 2006 12:17 pm

From Verichips Website.....

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VeriGuard™ is the first radio frequency identification (RFID) security solution to combine access control with the location and protection of individuals and assets by supporting multiple RFID technologies in one system — including VeriChip's patented, human-implantable RFID microchip.

How it Works

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Features:

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Offers a customizable combination of application modules, RFID technologies and location resolutions
Provides scalability — easily integrates additional infrastructure and applications now or in the future
Centrally monitors facility activity on easy-to-use, browser-based electronic floor plans
Tracks system activity automatically through extensive reporting (e.g. alarm history, door activity)
Monitors the location of a tag from portal location down to real-time location, depending on receiver coverage

With VeriGuard's real-time monitoring and access control capabilities, multiple security applications are possible:
Control access to designated areas
Track and record visitors within desired areas
Protect personnel with real-time distress alerting
Locate and protect assets within your facility
Already have an access control system but require a higher level of security for authorized areas and personnel? VeriGuard also offers the VeriChip™ microchip and reader as a standalone option for integration with existing access control systems, offering the ultimate protection and cost savings.

With VeriGuard, gain RFID-based security for your organization never before possible.

( http://www.verichipcorp.com/content/solutions/veriguard )
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