|
The best protection is to just disable the chip and forget about it.
All one has to realize is that the FCC dictates that you may not transmit on certain frequencies, with the excuse that it would cause interference that would damage existing reception and/or devices.
It would be a simple thing to create a smal spark gap generator to fry an rfid chip with a short pulse of radiant energy.
RFID will fail if the units are unreliable, and prone to external impusles, such as ECM or EMP. Why do you think that the Animal Id program (NAIS) allows a single rfid tag to be used on a CAFO of 5000 swine? It's because they fail, and just imagine the cost of tagging 500 pigs with RFID ear tags, and then maintain the database necessary to track them.
Then, think of the farmer who has only 10 to 20 pigs on the free range. He is not allowed to use one tag like the cafos, so he is burdened by the cost of materials, labor and administration, and that is prejudical to the small farmer. Same thing applies to the small farmer raising chickens or other poultry.
Or what about individual RFID tags implanted in bank notes? They can now track a bill throughout the economy, from printing press, to your wallet, to the supermarket cash drawer, to the bank, to the withdrawl, and perhaps to to the evidence room at the local police station, or the Nigerian Bank when it is deposited. Every transfer of the once anonymous concept of cash money now becomes an auditable transaction, ready to analysis by the bank, treasury, fbi, medical industries, etc..
Now that we know that the NSA has full, unfettered access to the cloud, it is not unreasonable to think that every electroninc transaction is not currently decoded, and stuffed into a massive database for subsequent analysis.
RFId chips in banknotes is not science fiction, and if the terminolgy "Chip" forces you to think of something bigger than a grain of rice, you need to open you mind and learn about nanotechnology, because we are using Atomic Force Microscopy and can manipulate individual atoms at will.
|