RFID Tech Infiltrating a British Institution
An anonymous reader writes, "According to silicon.com, Marks & Spencer — a department store as quintessentially British as tea & cake — is so pleased with its trial of RFID clothes-tagging that it's planning to roll it out nationwide. Considering that the UK's Information Commissioner recently made a lot of noise around the RFID track and trace tech, warning that Britain is 'sleepwalking into a surveillance society', Marks & Sparks seems to be setting itself up as a tweed-clad Public Enemy Number One."
"The RFID tags are contained in throwaway paper labels attached to, but not embedded in" the clothing.
Buy garment, remove RFID tag. Hopefully, it will be on one of the easily removed tags that you cut off anyway.
It's like a nickname. Marks and Spencer is widely referred to as Marks and Sparks in the UK. Don't ask me why. It just is.
They're just using RFID to prevent shoplifting.
If you had bothered to RTFA instead of jerking your knee, you'd have read that they're using it for inventory control.
Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
Actually they're just used for inventory.. the article mentions nothing of loss prevention.
The RFID tags are contained in throwaway paper labels attached to, but not embedded in, a variety of men's and women's clothing items in stores.
Someone could simply rip off the label before exiting the store if they wanted to shoplift.
Anyway, I think people's objection is that eventually the RFID tags will become commonplace. But instead of placing them in easy-to-remove paper lables, they will be embeddeded in the fabric, or other materials/products, to be used as you describe.
I'm not saying that will happen, although I think someone will try, or that there's any legitimate risk of people being tracked using these things, but that's "how this is bad" in a nutshell.
https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere
The tag only has an ID, (think MAC address) you require access to the backend database only then can know what is in the bag.