[Politech] Wal-Mart and P&G accused of secret RFID testing [priv]

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Tue Nov 11 2003 - 06:29:42 PST

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    Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2003 01:58:34 -0600
    From: Andrew Edelstein <andrew@pure-chaos.com>
    To: declan@private
    Subject: [Fwd: [priv] [Fwd: Scandal: Wal-Mart, P&G Involved in Secret RFID
      Testing]]
    
    
    
    
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    
    November 10, 2003
    
    *Scandal: Wal-Mart, P&G Involved in Secret RFID Testing *
    /American consumers used as guinea pigs for controversial technology/
    
    Wal-Mart and Procter & Gamble conducted a secret RFID trial involving
    Oklahoma consumers earlier this year, the Chicago Sun Times revealed on
    Sunday. Customers who purchased P&G's Lipfinity brand lipstick at the
    Broken Arrow Wal-Mart store between late March and mid-July unknowingly
    left the store with live RFID tracking devices embedded in the
    packaging. Wal-Mart had previously denied any consumer-level RFID
    testing in the United States.
    
    "It proves what we've been saying all along," says Katherine Albrecht,
    Founder and Director of Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion
    and Numbering (CASPIAN). "Wal-Mart, Procter & Gamble and others have
    experimented on shoppers with controversial spy chip technology and
    tried to cover it up. Consumers and members of the press should be upset
    to learn that they've been lied to."
    
    The Sun Times also reported that a live video camera trained on the
    shelf allowed Procter & Gamble employees, sometimes hundreds of miles
    away, to observe the Lipfinity display and consumers interacting with it.
    
    "This trial is a perfect illustration of how easy it is to set up a
    secret RFID infrastructure and use it to spy on people," says Albrecht.
    "The RFID industry has been paying lip service to privacy concerns,
    calling for notice, choice and control. But companies like P&G, Wal-Mart
    and Gillette have already violated all three tenets when they thought
    nobody was looking. This is exactly why we oppose item-level RFID
    tagging and have called for mandatory labeling legislation."
    
    The Lipfinity tests were conducted while Wal-Mart and Procter & Gamble
    were sponsors of the MIT Auto-ID Center, a consortium of over 100
    corporations and government agencies founded in 1999. Auto-ID Center
    activities were supervised by a Board of Overseers, which included both
    Wal-Mart and Procter & Gamble, along with the Uniform Code Council
    (UCC), the standards body that oversees the bar code. The UCC (along
    with EAN International) took over commercial functions from the Auto-ID
    center on November 1 of this year.
    
    "Given the players, the Wal-Mart Lipfinity trial probably isn't an
    isolated incident," says CASPIAN spokeswoman Liz McIntyre. "UCC and
    Auto-ID Center documents suggest that other products, including Huggies
    baby wipes, Pantene shampoo, Caress soap, Purina Dog Chow and Right
    Guard deodorant were also slated for live RFID field trials. Coca Cola,
    Kraft, Kodak and Johnson & Johnson products are also implicated.
    However, it may be difficult for consumers to learn the extent of those
    trials in the current climate of secrecy and denials."
    
    (Links to documentation provided below.)
    
    Disclosure of the Broken Arrow trial is only the latest scandal to hit
    the privacy plagued RFID industry. Early this year, CASPIAN called for a
    worldwide boycott of Italian clothing manufacturer Benetton when the
    company announced plans to equip women's undergarments with live RFID
    tracking tags (see http://www.boycottbenetton.org). This summer, CASPIAN
    uncovered an RFID-enabled Gillette "smart shelf" in a Brockton,
    Massachusetts Wal-Mart and helped disclose Gillette's scheme to secretly
    photograph consumers picking up Mach3 razor blades in UK Tesco stores
    (see http://www.boycottgillette.com/spychips.html). The group also
    revealed confidential industry plans to "pacify" consumers and
    "neutralize opposition" in the hope that consumers will be "apathetic"
    and "resign themselves to the inevitability" of RFID product tagging
    (see: http://www.nocards.org/press/pressrelease07-07-03_1.shtml).
    
    CASPIAN encourages consumers to contact Wal-Mart, P&G and the UCC to
    voice their opinion about the use of RFID spy chips in consumer
    products. Contact information for these companies is provided on the
    group's RFID website at http://www.spychips.com.
    
    For links to documents implicating other consumer products in item-level
    tagging trials, see:
    
    "/The EPC Network, RFID and data/" at
    http://www.autoid.org/SC31/clr/200305_3822_UConnect%20I4.pdf
    mirrored at: http://www.cryptome.org/rfid/ucc-rfid.pdf
    
    "/EPC Field Test/" at http://cryptome.org/rfid/field_test_nov02.pdf
    
    "/Lessons Learned in the Real World/" (note, for example, pages 25 & 26)
    at http://cryptome.org/rfid/rfid-field-test.pdf
    
    Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering (CASPIAN)
    is a grass-roots consumer group fighting retail surveillance schemes
    since 1999. With members in all 50 U.S. states and over 20 nations
    across the globe, CASPIAN seeks to educate consumers about marketing
    strategies that invade their privacy and to encourage privacy-conscious
    shopping habits across the retail spectrum.
    
    The Chicago Sun Times article is online at:
    http://www.suntimes.com/output/business/cst-nws-spy09.html
    <http://www.suntimes.com/output/business/cst-nws-spy09.html.>
    
    
    ==========================================================
    
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    To subscribe or unsubscribe to the CASPIAN mailing list, click the
    following link or cut and paste it into your browser:
    http://www.nocards.org/cgi/mojo/mojo.cgi
    
    If you have difficulty with the web-based interface, you may also
    subscribe or unsubscribe via email by writing to:
    admin@private <mailto:admin@private>
    
    ==========================================================
    
    For CASPIAN's overview of RFID product identification and tracking
    technology, please see:  http://www.stoprfid.org/rfid_overview.htm
    <http://www.BoycottGillette.com/aboutrfid.html>
    
    
    
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