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RACING TOWARDS THE MARK
"And He causeth all, both
small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a
mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads: And that no
man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark"
Rev.13:16,17
New Technology and the Coming "Mark of
the Beast"
Joseph Candel
Can you imagine a world in which any store, restaurant, or
other business you enter is able to identify you, make note of what
you're wearing, and even detect how much money you have in your wallet?
Science fiction?--Not for long! Believe it or not, one day soon radio
frequency identification (RFID) technology could be identifying,
screening, and tracking us all.
RFID "tags" use radio frequencies to transmit a code that
uniquely identifies the tag. The silicon chips that hold RFID tags--some
no bigger than a grain of salt--are small enough that they could be
placed in clothing, razor blades, library books, and even currency.
RFID readers within 15 or 20 feet of some tags can pick up their
signals. Global databases will let businesses keep track of every
location where an RFID signal has been read.
How might the tags identify you? If, for example, you buy a
sweater using a credit card, your name could be forever linked with that
particular item of clothing.
That's what worries privacy advocates--the ease with which
companies can read the tags and keep logs, identifying and profiling
consumers long after the tagged products those consumers bought leave
the store. Privacy advocates and civil libertarians also say the
technology designed for tracking clothing items at a very short range
can easily be adapted to tracking and spying on people, just as software
"cookies" now track computer users' movements online.
With little public fanfare, this new RFID technology is
rolling out on a massive scale. Alien Technology, an RFID tag maker,
projects that within three years the company will sell 10 billion RFID
tags a year, and that the cost of a single tag will drop below
US$0.05--cheap enough that they may start to appear in most products.
Wal-Mart, the world largest retailer, has mandated the use of the RFID
tagging by its suppliers on all their products by 2005, and many other
large retail outfits are expected to follow Wal-Mart's lead.
Another technology to keep an eye on is the new Electronic Product Code
(EPC). Hailed as the next-generation product code system, EPC could
someday replace with a microchip the bar code (Universal Product Code,
or UPC) found on most merchandise today.
Whereas bar codes only identify groups of products, the EPC
is designed to provide a unique serial number for every item in the
system. For example, at present all cans of Coke produced at a certain
bottling plant or within a certain country have the same bar code. Under
EPC, each and every bottle or can of Coke would have its own unique
identifier. Impossible, you say? The EPC is built around a 96-bit format
that is large enough to generate a unique code for every grain of rice
on the planet.
Privacy advocates and civil libertarians say the technology
designed for tracking clothing items can easily be adapted to tracking
and spying on people.
Retailers and manufacturers think a one-of-a-kind product
code could help reduce theft and counterfeit goods, and simplify the
inventory process.
The way it's been designed, an EPC can be linked to
databases that can store far more information about a particular product
than is possible with the current bar code system. In addition to the
basic information provided by UPC-item, price, and manufacturer--the EPC
could link to information about the buyer and location of the item based
on a complex system of microchip tags and microchip readers that
communicate via radio frequency (RFID).
And RFID tags aren't just for goods found in supermarkets
and malls. Applied Digital Solutions (ADS) of Palm Beach, Florida, is
hoping that Americans can be persuaded to implant RFID chips under their
skin to identify themselves when going to a cash machine or in place of
using a credit card. The surgical procedure, which is performed with
local anesthetic, embeds a 12-by-2 mm RFID tag in the flesh of a human
arm. ADS even ran a special promotion urging Americans to "get chipped."
The first 100,000 people to sign up were offered a $50 discount.
And why shouldn't you get chipped? That way you could
simply walk into a store, pick up the items you want, stroll through the
reader on your way out of the store, and the cost of the items would
automatically be charged to your credit account. Not only that, but all
the information regarding your purchases would be beamed to the
manufacturers, who would be ever so happy to send you special offers on
future purchases, or even to stock you up on their products at
prearranged times, billing you automatically.
The system would also put an end to shoplifting and other
forms of theft and fraud, as there would be no cash or credit cards to
steal and every item would be linked to its rightful owner. There would
be far fewer criminals and drug dealers (again, no cash), and society
would be much better off.--Or would it? It seems benign--even
beneficial--but what about its potential to track your every physical
and financial move?
The new technology is preparing the public, and it won't be
long till the mother of all silicon chips is ready for its debut--the
mark of the Beast, as predicted in the Bible. "He [the False Prophet,
top minister in the Antichrist's government] causes all, both small and
great, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on [or 'in']
their right hand or on their foreheads, and that no one may buy or sell
except one who has the mark or the name of the Beast [the Antichrist],
or the number of his name. Here is wisdom. Let him who has understanding
calculate the number of the Beast, for it is the number of a man: His
number is 666" (Revelation 13:16-18).
When the mark of the Beast comes, don't be duped into
taking it!
[end of article]
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