An ATM card
under your skin
Company
pushes chip implants as ID alternative
Applied
Digital Solutions is hoping their 12-by-2.1mm radio frequency identification
tag catches on as an under-the-skin alternative to an ATM or credit card

Nov. 25 — Radio frequency identification tags aren’t just for
pallets of goods in supermarkets anymore. Applied Digital Solutions (ADS) of
THE SURGICAL PROCEDURE, which is performed with local anesthetic,
embeds a 12-by-2.1mm RFID tag in the flesh of a human arm. ADS Chief Executive
Scott Silverman, in a speech at the ID World 2003 conference in Paris last
Friday, said his company had developed a “VeriPay”
RFID technology and was hoping to find partners in financial services firms.
Matthew Cossolotto, a spokesman for ADS who says he’s
been “chipped,” argues that competing proposals to embed RFID tags in key fobs
or cards were flawed. “If you lose the RFID key fob or if it’s stolen, someone
else could use it and have access to your important accounts,” Cossolotto said. “VeriPay solves
that problem. It’s subdermal and very difficult to
lose. You don’t leave it sitting in the backseat of the taxi.”
RFID tags are miniscule microchips, which some
manufacturers have managed to shrink to half the size of a grain of sand. They
listen for a radio query and respond by transmitting a unique ID code,
typically a 64-bit identifier yielding about 18 thousand trillion possible
values. Most RFID tags have no batteries. They use the power from the initial
radio signal to transmit their responseWhen embedded
in human bodies, RFID tags raise unique security
concerns. First, because they broadcast their ID number, a thief could rig up
his or her own device to intercept and then rebroadcast the signal to an ATM.
Second, sufficiently dedicated thieves may try to slice the tags out of their
victims.
“We do hear concerns about this from a privacy point
of view,” Cossolotto said. “Obviously the company
wants to do all it can to protect privacy. If you don’t want it anymore ... you
can go to a doctor and have it removed. It’s not something I would recommend
people do at home. I call it an opt-out feature.”
Chris Hoofnagle, a lawyer
at the
“It doesn’t make sense to go from a card, which is controlled
by an individual, to a chip, which you cannot control.”
ADS shares have slid from a high of around $12 in
2000 to 40 cents, and the company is now fighting to stay listed on the Nasdaq. “Our common stock did not
regain the minimum bid price requirement and on
ADS is running a special
promotion urging Americans to “get chipped.” The first 100,000 people to sign
up will receive a $50 discount.
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