March 25th 2008 RFID “Dust” - An Invisible Defense Perimeter
Nox Defense Manufactures RFID “Dust” as Part of Invisible Defense Perimeter
Another prime example of how miniaturized surveillance technology is becoming. Nox Intelligent Perimeter Defense has produced, as part of a larger facility surveillance system, the aptly called ID-Dust. In this particular aspect of the defense system, tiny RFID chips are sprinkled on the floor of an access-restricted area, where they can be easily picked up by a target’s shoes. Working in tandem with video surveillance and hidden RFID readers, the dust provides a detailed log of a tagged person’s movements within a facility fitted with Nox’s security measures. RFID tagging, coupled with high-resolution video surveillance, creates a near-invisible defensive perimeter. Nox’s ID-Dust and other equally covert tags can be used to track anything from valuable electronics, hard-copy documents, to personnel. The RFID readers are clandestinely installed behind walls, floors, ceilings, and other inconspicuous places. Tagged objects/personnel are overlaid in real time on a map of the facility. The tags can be used to automatically prompt video cameras to begin recording when someone enters a monitored area, as well as to send alerts to security personnel. The system is currently being marketed to both government agencies and commercial companies. At least one report names the FBI as an “early adopter” of the system. Critics of such “Big Brother” surveillance methods are rightly startled. Nox’s grain-fine ID chips have the potential to turn any structure into a veritable surveillance sandbox. –Hooded Soldier
http://www.net-security.org/secworld.php?id=5911
http://industrywizards.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id…
March has provided a glut of updates regarding America’s domestic spying and surveillance activities. Recent inquiries have given startling insight into the NSA’s and other agencies’ methods, while newly proposed legislation put forth by Democratic lawmakers seems intent on watchdogging warrantless wiretapping and other questionable (read:unconstitutional) intelligence gathering techniques. This revised version of a Senate passed version of the bill would no longer provide telecommunications companies with legal immunity. While the legislation would not directly interrupt surveillance operations, it would at least help to instill a sense of accountability on the part of telecommunications companies who agreed to cooperate with national security agencies after 9/11. Perhaps this recent development is an indication of things to come, and the coming weeks may bring official opposition towards this rampant disregard for privacy and civil liberties; I ,for one, won’t hold my breath. —Hooded Soldier
