By
Andrew Donoghue
Tuesday, November 08 2005 03:50 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/communications/0,39044192,39288687,00.htm
The 'one man and his dog' organizations that are opposed to
RFID are not worth worrying about, according to BT.
BT has claimed that companies interested in deploying RFID shouldn't be put off by
protests, as there are always people who resist new technology.
Speaking at the first day of the RFID Futures conference in
London, Ian Neild, disruptive futurist at BT Research Labs, said that the
anti-RFID lobby wasn't anything to worry about and wouldn't impact the rollout
of the technology in the long-term.
"I don't think people are that bothered about it. I think
it's a small minority of people using the power of the Internet to make a lot of
noise which the press like," he said. "I am not worried what these people do--we have always had Luddites," Neild said.
BT has met with some anti-RFID organisations to discuss
privacy concerns, according to Neild. One solution offered by the telco was that
some items would be available without RFID tags in the future but consumers
would have to pay extra for such goods.
"What BT did was get some of the anti-privacy companies
together--I say companies but it's more like one man and his dog. These people
will be able to buy non-tagged gear but it will cost a lot more," he said. You
won't lose that much money from those people."
But BT may be underestimating the passion and
resourcefulness of RFID's opponents, such as Consumers Against Supermarket
Privacy Invasion and Numbering (Caspian). Last month, Caspian organised a
demonstration outside a Wal-Mart store in Dallas, attended by around 75 people,
to protest about the retailer's of what it calls 'spychips'.
"We discovered that Wal-Mart's partners--companies like
NCR, IBM, Sensormatic, and Procter & Gamble--have developed extensive plans
to monitor and track people and exploit them commercially through RFID tags in
the things they buy," claimed Katherine Albrecht, founder of Caspian.
"These companies are working with Wal-Mart to place RFID
tags into all consumer products. This will make objects--and the people wearing
and carrying them--remotely trackable. We have rock-solid evidence that they
are already devising ways to exploit that potential," Albrecht added.
Caspian has also called for a worldwide boycott of Tesco
stores due to concerns over the retailer's increasing use of RFID.
But Neild argues that the popularity of Oyster technology on
the London Underground shows that people don't mind having their movements
tracked. He added that store loyalty cards also held lots of information on
shoppers but were accepted. "Loyalty card lets them see what I have bought--so
why do I care if they tag my chicken?" he said.
BT has a special business unit focused on RFID
implementations--BT Auto-ID Services--which provides a suite of managed RFID
services that can be integrated with customers' existing ERP and warehouse
management software.
BT Auto-ID Services chief executive Ross Hall likened the
infrastructure around RFID to the telephone network, with BT in the middle
acting as central hub or switch--feeding in data from tags and dishing out
information to a company's internal systems.