Privacy Controversy Dogs RFID Startup
How can a company that makes radio frequency identification ink for use on animals and humans head off bloggers' criticism?
...An Issue of Privacy
Yet the kind of celebrity Somark has achieved is definitely a two-edged sword that raises marketing questions Pydynowski, 24, and Mays, 26, have thus far not figured out how to answer. The reason this tiny company is garnering so much attention is that it has developed what could be the next stage of a technology for tagging animals and people.
The issue of tagging has divided state governments, farmers, consumers, and investors. The U.S. Agriculture Dept. is pushing for tagging of all of the country's millions of farm animals under its National Animal Identification System (NAIS) program. Small-farm owners, who say the system infringes on their privacy, oppose the program (see BusinessWeek.com, 12/19/06, "Farmers Say No to Animal Tags").
Some critics of the NAIS program fear that tagging of animals will eventually evolve into tagging of people, and already one young company, VeriChip, has begun marketing RFID chips for implantation into the arms of humans (see BusinessWeek.com, 1/11/07, "Animal Tags for People?").
For Their Own Good?
Somark says its product, a bio-compatible ink applied like a tattoo, just under the skin of animals or people, acts in much the same way as an RFID tag, emitting a signal that can be picked up by a scanner a few feet away. Pydynowski is pleased to discuss the advantages of the Somark product over existing RFID tags for animals—namely, it can't fall off, is more easily read, and is considerably cheaper ($1 vs. about $2.50 per conventional tag). "It's a bulletproof tracking and identification system," he says of the Somark product.
But when I ask him about the application of the Somark product to people, he gets nervous. Rather than respond spontaneously, he refers me to a technology trade article that quoted him as saying the tattoo could be used by the military to track and rescue stranded soldiers. "It's a very scary proposition when you're dealing with humans, but with military personnel, we're talking about saving soldiers' lives and it may be something worthwhile," he says in the article.
Grund Comment: "Okay lets track soldiers, pets, prisoners,...err oh yeah, children.... Its for their own good. Geez...."
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I hate having to fill out a form just to post a comment, but I have had to add that thing where you have to type in the letters that you see in the graphic to be able to post a comment, because I was getting nasty spam stuff. You can still choose anonymous.
If you have relevant links or resources, please put them in the comments and I will certainly check them out!