Officials secretly RFID'd at Internet Summit 216
ewoudenberg writes "A Washington Times article reports that researchers managed to gain entrance to the Internet and technology conference in Switzerland last week only to discover that the summit's badges contained undisclosed RFID chips. The badges were handed out to more than 50 prime ministers, presidents and other high-level officials from 174 countries, including the United States."
Cool. (Score:5, Funny)
"For the people, and of the people" can only be effective if the people keep a track on such people with power
Re:Cool. (Score:3, Interesting)
what use would the RFID be? it doesnt permit tracking a 'la gps...which would really be the only reason to take a 'politician'.
I despise the political system and politicians too...but that really isnt an insightful comment. A politician has a job, just like you. Should you be bagged and tagged to make sure you arent talking to competitors.
And besides whether we should...like I said, you must not understand RFID cause it would be useless to track people outside of a small, definitive area.
Re:Cool. (Score:3, Insightful)
A politicians job is far more important than mine. It has its risks, it has its responsibilities.
Politicians should be held accountable for every single thing they do while they are on the job. Its the only way to ensure we -the people- don't get screwed
Re:Cool. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Cool. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
If anybody can monitor the President's location, that includes the bad guys.
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
Re:Cool. (Score:4, Insightful)
It is not our concern who they sleep with, eat with, talk to in their personal time.
It is not because they hold a public office, they don't have a right to privacy.
Everything that doesn't influence the execution of their mandate is not our concern, and should remain private.
Public life != Big Brother
I agree (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I agree (Score:2, Interesting)
Now, I defend this right for both parties because you can not expect that they uphold your right if you continually violate theirs.
By defending their rights, I am defending mine.
As to Clinton having an affair. I don't regard that as a cause for impeachment. That is a problem between him, his wife and his mistress. Thus a matter of his privacy.
On the other hand, he had an affair with a White House employee. That could
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
It is not our concern who they sleep with, eat with, talk to in their personal time.
It is not because they hold a public office, they don't have a right to privacy.
Everything that doesn't influence the execution of their mandate is not our concern, and should remain private.
Public life != Big Brother
I think that's exactly the point the parent post was trying to make.
In other words, if politicians wouldn't want it, the people probably dont want it either.
A private c
Michael Franti (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Cool. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
This is a weak argument. I don't care what words he used. He communicated untrue information, therefore, he lied.
However, since his sex life had nothing to do with his job as President, I think he's entitled to lie about it, because IMHO the question should not have been asked.
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
I think he's entitled to lie about it, because IMHO the question should not have been asked.
Not even as part of an investigation into allegations of criminal rape (see also: Juanita Broaderick)?
The question was legitimate. And, even if it isn't, you're not entitled to lie about it while under oath; the appropriate course of action would be to decline to answer. But, as I said, the whole sordid affair came about in due course of a rape investigation, and an investigation into Clinton's obstruction of sa
Re:Cool. (Score:3, Interesting)
However, since his sex life had nothing to do with his job as President, I think he's entitled to lie about it, because IMHO the question should not have been asked.
I'm a Republican, and did think the whole impeachment thing was a waste of everyone's time and money and shouldn't have been done. Richard Nixon took actions worthy of impeachment; Bill Clinton did not.
However, I don't think it's justifiable to say that what happened with Monica Lewinsky was his own business and he had a right to lie abo
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
This is why he has never been tried for purjery, as he did not commit a crime by using the judges own definition.
Re:Cool. (Score:2, Informative)
That's why its called splitting hairs, my friend. Some dicionary's have 50+ definitions of the word "set", does that mean I'm lying if I use it in one connotation, without mentioning the 49 others?
Yes, he was, per my point above.
No he wasn't, as the other poster proved.
We just had a case locally where a cop was getting BJs in return for not issuing tickets. (Again, power over powerless). Turn
Re:Cool. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Location matters not.
This would help get an elected official assassinated, perhaps their family and or children hurt.
Re:Cool. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
Re:Cool. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Cool. (Score:2, Funny)
Why, he's right there in my crosshairs...
Seriously, wouldn't this be too much of a security risk, even if it's just in one building and not everywhere they go?
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
If I had moderation points, I'd mod this up.
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
What a well thought out idea!
Re:Cool. (Score:1)
Duh.
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
Scuse me, but whenever I talk about killing prominent political figures over non-encrypted channels I like to mention words like terrorism, echelon, cocaine and nuclear.
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
Other than that it would present a personal danger to politicians and their families.
I guess the danger would outweigh the one benefit.
Or are we short sighted?
Re:Cool. (Score:2)
(Gross Conceptual Error Carried Forward)
Knowing location does not provide any real form of control.
How would you exercise this control?
Are you going to send the police to arrest them?
Spank them?
You cant and wont.
Now for the first part, if you do not understand National Security.
Take President Bob (made-up) he has a wife and two lovely children. Someone uses the RFID to locate Bob they then take his wife and/or children hostage. They then tell Bob that his family will die if he vetos t
They Got Him! (Score:5, Funny)
Note for the humor-impaired: this is a joke.
Re:They Got Him! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:They Got Him! (Score:1)
DUPE!! (Score:2, Informative)
Are Dups Bad? (Score:2)
New terrorist spying method (Score:5, Funny)
Privacy (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder what their policy will be?
duplicate (Score:1, Informative)
Slashdort Needs to RFID Its Postings (Score:1, Redundant)
Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:3, Redundant)
from the department of redundancy department (Score:2)
Re:from the department of redundancy department (Score:2)
Still, /. editors could have acknowledged the earlier story before posting it to the front page.
Re:Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:1)
I'll bet it would be possible to use a spam-filter-esque system to compare the text of the articles and the links they point to. By weighting heavily the text of the links and the headings in the linked documents, they could give stories a dup-score and the editors would be shown a list sorted from highest-to-lowest.
Wait... it would have to have a limit on the number of stories it goes back, or else it will compare this one story to every other story in the database! Any ideas?
Bayesian filter for articles? (Score:2)
Re:Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:3, Funny)
I bet it would be possible to check the spelling of the articles posted using a "spell checker". I recall using one in the late 70s on my student Unix system.
Re:Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:2)
Re:Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:1)
I would think you're new here... but since you've got a low UID, you're just hijacking your faters
All the little slashbots around have to realize, dupes will never disappear.
Taco doesn't want to code a dupe-finder, and the editors just don't care.
Re:Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:2)
173196 low? That's a joke, right?
For what (little) it's worth, the problem is getting worse. A few years ago, when I was new here, there was hardly ever a dupe. As the site's grown, though, and I suppose the number of submissions has increased, they've started slipping through more and more often.
I wouldn't say it's a huge problem - after all, just because something's been discussed before doesn't stop us all discussing it again (eg Wind
DIY (Score:2)
Re:Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:1, Redundant)
perfectly perfect (Score:2)
Re:Welcome Welcome to to Slashdot Slashdot (Score:1, Redundant)
We don't need no stinkin badges! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:We don't need no stinkin badges! (Score:2)
I, for one, am getting fed up aboot the continued mispelling in this famous quote. It's "steenking".
Re:We don't need no stinkin badges! (Score:2)
I, for one, am getting fed up aboot the continued mispelling in this famous quote. It's "steenking".
From the Stinking Badges [darryl.com] home page:
There's a sound clip from the 1948 movie [darryl.com] on that page, and that doesn't sound like "steenk
Re:We don't need no stinkin badges! (Score:2)
That, and WKRP. Nice job of tracking down the apparent original source by 1u3hr.
Re:We don't need no stinkin badges! (Score:2)
Good. (Score:5, Insightful)
Understanding about fire being hot often comes after one has been burnt. Perhaps they'll feel that they shouldn't be "spied on" without their knowledge. Perhaps it might influence decisions they make in future...
Simon.
Re:Good. (Score:3, Insightful)
And watch ... (Score:2, Insightful)
watching you watch me (Score:5, Insightful)
Washington Post has their own agendas politically when it comes to reporting. Sure it's pretty shitty to be monitored, but there is nothing stating that any information used was used for anything other than maybe for the sake of having some card manufacturers new card being tested.
Remember intelligence agencies from all over the place keep tabs on each other via other means (ECHELON, HUMINT, OSINT, IMINT, SIGNIT), so I doubt this was anything to be concerned with. Strictly something `chick' to report on. It's far more easier to set up assets to bang (screw/lay/fsck) one of these guys for info, than it would to keep watch of what they do.
User gets in car to go to summit, user's Eazypass or other form of cardpaymentsys tracks what exits he uses via tolls paid. User stops at gasoline station, credit card is used, card information is transmitted. User talks the beltway, cameras capture this. Get the picture? Everyone else sure did. Again other than this being all the rage (RFID's) I doubt it was something major, but surely someone with agendas sees it to be so. When they can produce something absolute that was used with this information, not just 'oh my look at this an RFID story' than I'll worry.
PS... Proof doesn't mean `hey we're the Foobar Newspaper
Re:watching you watch me (Score:3, Informative)
The link is to the Washington Times , not the Washington Post.
Re:watching you watch me (Score:2)
Washington Times != left-wing (Score:2)
The Moonies now also own the once-great United Press International, UPI. Just about all the good journalists left UPI in disgust when the takeover happened a few years back, and it turned into a sort of National Enquirer Newsfeed, practically overnight.
Summary (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd have a lot more respect for activist reporters if they would report the facts without hype. It's not the second coming, it's possibly a minor infraction of the Swiss information laws.
Re:Summary (Score:5, Funny)
That's no surprise. If I recall correctly, the G7 summits are intended to be discussions on global economic policy, to which none of the affected people (pretty much everybody but government officials) are ever invited. (In fact, I don't hear of many economists going to those conferences either; if I'm wrong, please correct.)
As for press not getting in, sure you may loathe muckraker reporting (many people do), but sometimes there's just too much muck to allow to pile up. Do you really want your government to be deciding elements of policy without any input from its constituency? That's becoming the norm, and guerilla reporting may soon be the only way the operation of said government can come to light.
Yeah, I see where the article could sound like sour grapes. But then there's something to be said for the irony of the situation, and I'm glad that someone was in there to highlight it.
I'm not perfectly sure, but I think that next-to-the-last step should be Citizens of the world slap their respective governments upside the head and scream "What were you goobers THINKING??"
At least, that's my take on it...
Re:Summary (Score:5, Insightful)
And from the article, there's no indication that they're the same as the group of researchers who snuck in.
They disected a security card, and found (shock, horror) that it contained features designed to maintain security at said conference.
If that's what it was for, how come the security people couldn't tell them that? I'm glad you were able to get more info out of them than the researchers were.
Since this is the only dirt they managed to find, they spin it up into a sky-is-falling end-of-the-world privacy story.
The fact that they faked their way in so easily was the first bit of dirt they dug up. The fact that there were undisclosed monitoring devices in the badges was the next. The final blow was that they couldn't get any info from security about the monitoring, and basically that the conference violated at least three privacy laws in the current jurisdiction.
And that if this is how it goes in Switzerland, how will things go in Tunisia next year?
If you figure it's no biggie, maybe you're right. But then again, if we send a bunch of prime ministers and other politicos to all congregate in a single place, and then we put tags on them so that we know their comings and goings, and who is talking with whom, and then we don't have any apparent plan to purge that info at any point... how easy will it be for every terrorist in the world to strike against their least favorite government at next year's conference? This seems vaguely important to me.
Countermeasures (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Countermeasures (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Countermeasures (Score:2)
Here you go. [sharperimage.com]
Re:Microwave (Score:2)
Privacy issue, or planning aid? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Privacy issue, or planning aid? (Score:4, Insightful)
So, if you spent 2 hours in the bathroom with bad diarrhea, you'd have no problem telling them if they asked you why you were in there for so long and why you missed a few sessions? Is that it, every minute of your day there is open for anyone's scrutiny? (That is, anyone with access to an RFID tracker.)
Re:Privacy issue, or planning aid? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Privacy issue, or planning aid? (Score:2)
Re:Privacy issue, or planning aid? (Score:2)
Hmm, just maybe... (Score:1, Redundant)
Creapy? (Score:1, Insightful)
Creapy? (Score:1)
Washington Times (Score:1)
Re:Washington Times (Score:4, Interesting)
oh no! we know now... (Score:3, Funny)
WTF, Over... (Score:5, Insightful)
Heck, even parking garages are using these for employees now. My girlfriend has a little card (HID Prox card), which she uses at work to get into and out of the parking complex for work. Myself, I work at a company that builds physical security systems, so I work with these things every day. And, I find, that most of the privacy concerns are way overblown. Though, I still don't like the idea of carrying one on me, I am a bit of a privacy nut afterall.
If anything, this article sounds like a bunch of reporters got pissed, because they weren't allowed into a closed door conference, and broke the rules to get an access badge, and then reported on the evil RFID tag in the card, despite this being a very common thing, especially in places where security is an issue.
Hipocrisy? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Hipocrisy? (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, note that I did say privacy nut, which usually implies being irrational. Which many of my fears about privacy are, but I'll hang onto them, just in case one of them is right.
Re:WTF, Over... (Score:2)
The original press release reported on
Self-Defense (Score:5, Insightful)
We will get no regulation of the uses RFID is put to, while the Party is in power, and so it's up to us to sort this out.
Be advised that cellphone mfgrs are now adding technology that PUSHes ads to you. Will you be able to turn it off? Doubtful; if all the carriers do it, there's no place else to go.
And of course CDMA has always had geo-location... they promise it's only used to catch indicted criminals, but that claim is very doubtful, given some recent events.
Delegates at a conference could be identified as they approach their car. Obscuring codes don't matter; a sample could be taken at any time prior, at great distance with a parabolic dish. Soldiers could be accurately geo-located by the enemy.
Did you know that all GM cars since 1999 have black boxes in them, which are NOT being used to help you understand what happened 5 seconds before an accident, but to INDICT you for that accident, and expose you to civil litigation as well. Your inanimate *car* has become a prosecution witness against you, even though your own wife isn't supposed to be forced to testify against you.
This is the difference between the old way, and the neo-way, of managing the citizens. The deeper question is, why is our society becoming more and more adversarial, so fast? How do Nordic countries and Canada, get away with cooperation, rather than ever strengthening offense and defense, every day? They don't worry about NOT being something, like we Americans do. Double-plus ungood.
You say that when out in public, you have no expectation of privacy? True, but RFID expands that 'public' from your immediate surroundings (which you are aware of, and choose to inhabit), to the known universe, and for all time. If in 10 years it is considered treasonous to question RFID, some of us will be screwed, now, won't we? We all go places we'd like to keep private sometimes, now, don't we? Care to give that up, for no good reason other than FEAR?! Of our own government/corporate oligopoly? How much of your day do you spend in FEAR?! WTF are you afraid of NOW, FGS?!
RFID is a great idea for inventory, but should be disabled/disablable when purchased. I doubt those chips now in tires, can be disabled, given the vulcanization process. And tags will soon be microscopic.
RFID has no business on a person, as long as corporations and politicians behave adversarially toward their public at the highest levels.
RFID on slashdot stories (Score:2, Funny)
that's a lot of countries for so few people (Score:2, Funny)
so each official was from an average of 3.5 countries?
RFID is nothing new (Score:3, Informative)
So secretly, it was in the Times (Score:1)
It's all about marketing (Score:2, Insightful)
Overblown as usual (Score:2)
In other news.... (Score:3, Funny)
Cafeteria staff were stunned by the spectacle produced when each oven was crammed full of badges, and the 'Start' button pressed. "I'd always heard stories about what would happen if you put anything with metal in it into a microwave" said head cook Rowena Splatt, "But I never thought I would ever see it in action! That horrible buzzing noise, the showers of sparks -- though I will admit that all those colors were kind of pretty -- but the smell! Oh, that was the worst part!! It reminded us all of last week's liver-and-onion special, with hints of burned cranberries and overcooked zucchini..."
Security personnel monitoring the RFID receiver systems also reported strange occurrences. "It was like thousands of these tinny little Munchkin-like voices screamed 'Help Meeeeeee!' all at once" reported Lt. Take-Emin Andbookem, head of security for the event. "And you wouldn't believe the volume! I've still got six people in the hospital, getting checked for hearing damage."
The event's organizers have reported that the badges will be reissued -- without RFID chips, this time -- and that the homogenized melted-together masses of the other badges will be made into holiday mobiles which will also feature unused AOL 9.0 CDs and old 30-pin memory SIMMs.
UN's ITU wants to take over internet from ICANN?? (Score:2)
Re:HEY, AMERICA! (Score:2, Interesting)
I want to leave the country for exactly that reason.
Re:Wow talk about security risk. (Score:2)
Re:Wow talk about security risk. (Score:2)