geert on Tue, 18 May 2004 00:54:44 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Germany's federal data protection officer demands law to define control of RFID tags |
From: padeluun <[email protected]> Germany's federal data protection officer demands law to define control of RFID tags. The German federal data protection officer Peter Schaar has demanded a law to define control of RFID tags in an interview with the German magazine "Focus", scheduled to appear today, Monday May 17th 2004. "This demand goes right in the direction of our principal claim", says padeluun of FoeBuD e.V. The FoeBuD as actor for the German section of the data protection negative price BigBrotherAward did nominate the "Metro Extra Future Store" in Rheinberg for the special "Data Octopus Award" back in october 2003. With this nomination they started a broad public discussion about the "snooping chips". Together with US consumer protection activist Katherine Albrecht FoeBuD discovered hidden RFID tags in the "Metro Extra Future Store" Payback consumer chipcards. Metro promised to exchange 10,000 "bugged" consumer chipcards after the data protection activists called for a demonstration in front of the Future Store in Rheinberg. "The exchange of the cards, and now the demand voiced by the federal data protection officer are our first greater successes", says Rena Tangens of FoeBuD e.V. "It shows that you can change things, if only you get involved". The "bridge" Foundation has, besides private contributions, founded the RFID campaign with 15,000 Euros. --- Agency message of the Focus magazine: FOCUS: Federal data protection officer demands law change to regulate Broadcasting Chips. The federal data protection officer, Peter Schaar, demands a change in the data protection laws regarding the so-called RFID chips. Over the past months data protection activists protested several times against this new kind of broadcasting chips, with which the sales industry wants to replace the barcodes in the long term. The Future Store of the wholesale trade company Metro in Rheinberg withdrew their consumer cards with RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) in february 2004, after the presence of the tags was discovered by data protection activists. RFID chips are not covered by current law, explains Peter Schaar in an interview with FOCUS. In theory you don't have to inform your consumers, if you are going to integrate RFID chips in your products, except for the case where you would associate personal data with the chips. This rule would not apply for a third person, who could just as well read the personal data from the chips without anyone taking notice, says Schaar. This is why Germany's federal data protection officer demands a change to the existing data protection law: products with chips integrated in them shall be labeled as such, and the consumer shall have a right to take a look at the stored data as well as ask for permanent deactivation of the chip after his purchase. The potential abuse possible with RFID is said to be enormous: "What happens, if when entering a different store I am scanned for expensive branded clothing?", Schaar gives an exmaple to Focus. "Consumers could possibly broadcast very individual data without even knowing about it. This is a very different quality compared to the old barcode." --------- contact: FoeBuD e.V. // Rena Tangens + padeluun Marktstra�e 18 // 33602 Bielefeld // Germany Tel: +49-521-175254 // Fax: +49-521-61172 // [email protected] www.foebud.org // www.bigbrotherawards.de # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]