News
427
(USA)
Le Wisconsin interdit l'implantation obligatoire de VeriChip
Commentaire :
suivrons-nous la voie tracée par l'Etat du Wisconsin en réclamant
DES MAINTENANT une loi interdisant définitivement tout emploi
forcé des implants, pour quelque motif que ce soit
Synthèse
: Le vote a recueilli l'unanimité devant les deux Chambres
Les
juristes de cet Etat ont perçu la nécessité de s'opposer par
voie légale à l'implantation avant même qu'il n'en soit question
de façon officielle. La loi dit qu'il est désormais illégal
de forcer quelqu'un à recevoir un implant à des fins médicales,
une amende de 10 000 dollars est prévue en cas de violation
de la loi.
Il
a été question des applications militaires et médicales.
=========================================
WISCONSIN
BANS FORCED HUMAN RFID CHIPPING
Groundbreaking
Law Spotlights Opposition to VeriChip
Civil
libertarians cheered yesterday upon news that Wisconsin Governor
Jim Doyle signed a law making it a crime to require an individual
to be implanted with a microchip. Activists and authors Katherine
Albrecht and Liz McIntyre joined the celebration, predicting
this move will spell trouble for the VeriChip Corporation,
maker of the VeriChip human microchip implant.
The VeriChip is a glass encapsulated Radio Frequency Identification
tag that is injected into the flesh to uniquely number and
identify people. The tag can be read silently and invisibly
by radio waves from up to a foot or more away, right through
clothing. The highly controversial device is also being marketed
as a way to access secure areas, link to medical records,
and serve as a payment device when associated with a credit
card.
"We're not even aware of anyone attempting to forcibly implant
microchips into people," says Albrecht. "That lawmakers felt
this legislation was necessary indicates a growing concern
that the company's product could pose a serious threat to
the public down the road."
Although the company emphasizes that its chip is strictly
voluntary, recent statements suggest this could easily change.
VeriChip Chairman of the Board Scott Silverman has been promoting
the VeriChip as a partial solution to immigration concerns,
proposing it as a way to register guest workers, verify their
identities as they cross the border, and "be used for enforcement
purposes at the employer level." He told interviewers on the
Fox News Channel that the company has "talked to many people
in Washington about using it."
The
company has also confirmed it has been in talks with the Pentagon
about replacing military dog tags with VeriChip implants.
Wisconsin's anti-human-chipping law comes at a particularly
bad time for VeriChip Corporation because it has an initial
public offering of its stock in the works, McIntyre observes.
"The company has been losing millions of dollars and has been
counting on public acceptance to stem its losses and prove
its future. The people have spoken. They don't want RFID devices
in their flesh, and we expect other states will join Wisconsin
in prohibiting forced chipping."
Albrecht
and McIntyre have dogged the VeriChip Corporation, revealing
medical and security flaws in its human chip and warning about
its serious privacy and civil liberties downsides in their
book "Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan
to Track Your Every Move with RFID."
Wisconsin's
new law was introduced as Assembly Bill 290 by Representative
Marlin D. Schneider (D) and was passed unanimously by both
houses of the Wisconsin State Legislature this spring. The
law makes it illegal to require an individual to have a microchip
implant and subjects a violator to a fine of up to $10,000
per day.
=========================================
ABOUT
THE BOOK
"Spychips:
How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track your Every
Move with RFID" (Nelson Current) was released in October 2005.
Already in its fifth printing, "Spychips" is the winner of
the 2006 Lysander Spooner Award for Advancing the Literature
of Liberty and has received wide critical acclaim. Authored
by Harvard doctoral researcher Katherine Albrecht and former
bank examiner Liz McIntyre, the book is meticulously researched,
drawing on patent documents, corporate source materials, conference
proceedings, and firsthand interviews to paint a convincing
-- and frightening -- picture of the threat posed by RFID.
Despite its hundreds of footnotes and academic-level accuracy,
the book remains lively and readable according to critics,
who have called it a "techno-thriller" and "a masterpiece
of technocriticism."
The
Spanish-language version of the book, titled "Chips Espias,"
will be available in bookstores in the Americas and Spain
starting June 6, 2006.
=========================================
FOR
MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Katherine
Albrecht (kma@spychips.com)
877-287-5854 ext. 1
or
Liz
McIntyre (liz@spychips.com)
877-287-5854 ext. 2
=========================================
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/
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