I have no idea whether or not this is legal. Requiring employees to have what amounts to multiple surgeries in order to perform their jobs? One to put the thing in, one to take it out. Plus possibly others if there's ever a problem with the implant.
Details:
Two employees have been injected with RFID chips this week as part of a new requirement to access their company's datacenter.Cincinnati based surveillance company CityWatcher.com created the policy with the hopes of increasing security in the datacenter where video surveillance tapes are stored. In the past, employees accessed the room with an RFID tag which hung from their keychains, however under the new regulations an implantable, glass encapsulated RFID tag from VeriChip must be injected into the bicep to gain access, a release from spychips.com said on Thursday.
Although the company does not require the microchips be implanted to maintain employment, anyone without one will not be able to access the datacenter, according to a Register article.
Ironically, the extra security sought may be offset by a recent discovery of Jonathan Westhues, where the security researcher showed the VeriChip can be skimmed and cloned, duplicating an implant’s authentication. When contacted, those at CityWatcher were unaware of the chip's security issue, according to the spychips.com release.
If members of the US law enforcement and security communities can do their jobs without surgical implants, this company ought to be able to do so as well.


Comments (1)
Hrmmm...
That's the company our HOA wants to run cameras in our neighborhood. They flew the CEO out for a sales pitch a few weeks ago.
Interesting.
Posted by Laura Atkins | February 13, 2006 10:37 AM