There's just one problem with that reference, the book says: That report makes no reference whatsoever to patient or drug misidentification having any impact on patient deaths.
The book quotes one of the report authors as saying the attribution as "a complete misrepresentation" and adds that, in reality, misidentification accounts for fewer than five percent of medical errors.
When Ziff Davis contacted PDC, the claim was still on their Web site and they promised to get back to us with an explanation. No one ever did but the claim has magically vanished from their site.
The biggest RFID argument that the authors attacked was the industry's claim that retailers and manufacturers have no interest nor intention in tracking products once they leave the stores and certainly no intent to track consumers.
The authorsKatherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyreuse vendors' own patent filings to show their thinking, such as an IBM filing titled "Identification and Tracking of Persons Using RFID-Tagged Items." A Phillips Electronics 2003 patent application talks about placing RFID tags in shoes so that they can be detected by RFID scanners embedded in floors.
Note to vendors: A little subtlety is probably not a bad idea when trying to patent ideas that your PR people are denying you're thinking about.
Consider Procter & Gamble's August 2001 RFID patent filing dubbed "Systems and Methods For Tracking Consumers In A Store Environment." The book then quotes Sandy Hughes, P&G's "global privacy executive" as assuring that P&G has "never even considered tracking consumers with RFID."
It then quotes Gillette's Dick Cantwell, the manufacturer's VP of global business management, saying the company wants to use RFID "to track consumer use of its products at home."
The authors had the most fun with a promotional RFID piece produced by NCR, including using RFID to price-discriminate against customers, especially those trying to bargain hunt.
"With RFIDs on loyalty cards to identify the customer and a customer shopping history database, items could be priced differently depending on characteristics of the person who was buying them." One appalling possibility: A consumer known to be hungry or who just got a raise could get charged more for groceries.
The book methodically debunks the argument that RFID chips can only be read from very short distances, making the idea of tracking consumers outside of stores difficult.
The authors argue that strategically placed readerssuch as at highway exitscould track consumers quite effectively, particularly as RFIDs get themselves into the home (refrigerators that alert the retailers when certain groceries run low), the car (for repairs or intelligent navigation systems) and cell phones (for payment).
The retail and manufacturing tracking capabilities are spooky, but the book gets downright freaky as it discusses government plans for embedding RFID chips into the flesh of people (military, prison inmates, sensitive government employees, etc.).
The book talks of the implants and casually debunks the frequently-cited claim that the glass-encased insert is "about the size of a grain of rice." The chip "actually measures 12 mm (.47 inches) long, making it a bit shorter than the diameter of a dime.
That's a lot larger than any rice we've ever seenand we both eat long grain rice." That one hurt as Ziff-Davis has used the "grain of rice" comment often enough, but we won't anymore.
The books talks about former Mexican attorney general Rafael Macedo de la Concha having an RFID chip inserted into himself and some of his employees "as a way to secure access to a sensitive records room." It then makes the case that, far from being secure, it encourages those employees to be kidnapped and have the chip removed by force.
The authors found a patent application from an RFID company called Persephone Inc. that proposes installing RFIDs deep within the body and it discusses ways for the implanted chip to "electroshock the implantee."
There's no question that the books pushes the anti-RFID a bit farciting biblical passages and asking how a Hitler would use RFIDbut those arguments are still something that RFID developers and retail/manufacturing execs need to hear.
If you need to hear a worst-case scenario and know the perceptionand possibly realitychallenges of RFID, reading SpyChips is the ideal first step.
Retail Center Editor Evan Schuman can be reached at Evan_Schuman@ziffdavis.com.
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