twsherma on Wed, 21 Jun 2006 18:54:56 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> World Cup 2006 |
The security industry is having a field day at the World Cup. The German government, with the help of private corporations from all over the world, is applying state of the art surveillance technologies to manage the crowds attending World Cup 2006. Philips, the Dutch electronics giant, is the official sponsor of this year's Cup. Philips, and the many other corporations involved in this global football extravaganza, wants us to have a series of exciting, but safe, soccer matches. Security starts with the tickets. Philips manufactured three and a half million tickets with tiny RFID chips embedded in every single ticket. RFID stands for radio frequency identification. These smart tickets have a tiny silicon chip that responds to queries from a radio transceiver. Each ticket is personalized and represents the person who purchased it. To get a ticket for a World Cup match you had to give your name, address, nationality, your birth date, which team you support, your bank details, and your ID or passport number. When you enter a stadium your ticket is checked against your ID or passport. Very little information resides on the ticket's chip, but the identity check is conducted against a series of computer databases. The Central Sports Intelligence Unit of the German Interior Ministry in Berlin has a database of over 6,000 hooligans already known to police. Germany's National Information and Cooperation Center is coordinating agencies as diverse as the German Soccer Association and Interpol. Interpol will use its I-24/7 electronic communications system to check World Cup tickets against its databases of stolen travel documents and photographs of known criminals. You can bet the CIA is also involved as terrorism is always a concern at such major global events. Tickets that trigger suspicion will activate surveillance cameras with facial recognition software. Privacy advocates are concerned that visual databases are being assembled using these smart football tickets to tag personal and financial data to the faces of ordinary citizens. The security industry is having a field day at World Cup 2006. The machines and software reading the tickets are provided by AXCESS, a ticketing technology company based in Salzburg, Austria. Nerve Theory: http://www.kunstradio.at/2006A/H5N1en.html # 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: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net