Good questions, JC. The Constitution gives us the right to "be secure in our persons and posessions," but nowhere does it mention privacy. RFID chips are only as informative as the information placeed on them. In the USA, uou should probably have to sign a waiver of some sorts to have your data, and only data you and your employer or card issuer, agree to have on the chip. In order to be offered employment, to gain access to offices or locations, or any other lawful purpose, you agree to carry a chip with the specified data.
In China, a dictatorship, the government tells you that you must have the chip, and it determines what information shall be on it. Their RFID chip's purpose is to control citizens (subjects).
In the USA, private enterprise or, if government, an employer and you mutually decide what shall be available. It's for access and selected security control, not personal control. That's quite a difference.
Posted By: JcsPlayGround
Deep Subject:
Consider this: nearly 12.4 million people in Shenzhen, China will have residency cards fitted with computer chips containing their name, address, work history, educational background, religion, ethnicity, police record, medical insurance status, and reproductive history. [FN1] The Chinese government also has ordered all large cities to issue such high-tech residency cards to approximately 150 million people who now live in a city but have not yet acquired permanent residency
RFID chips can also be used to track employees. They can be implanted under an employee's skin,
worn in an employee's clothing, or attached to an identification badge. The most widespread workplace use of RFID technology is chip-embedded staff identification (“ID”) badges, which are primarily used for controlled access to an employer's premises.
Is this against our 1st Amendment rights?
But also NOTE:
At this point, most nongovernment employees in the United States are exposed to a variety of forms of monitoring, including drug testing, closed circuit video filming, monitoring calls with clients or customers, monitoring e-mail and computer input and transmissions, using GPS systems in company cars and company phones, and personality and psychological testing. There is no comprehensive
right to privacy for employees in American workplaces regarding electronic monitoring.
What are your thoughts ....... Turn off your I-phone!! Would be a start!!
JC