Rfid

The identification chips, contained in a glass capsule that's slightly larger than a grain of rice, were injected into their upper arms by a syringe-like device.  When activated by a scanning signal, the chips send out a unique 64-bit code that can be linked to the person's identity, along with all sorts of other pertinent information, like security clearance.
A mother is panicking because she cannot find her child at a busy daycare.  The daycare provider quickly sweeps an electronic wand around the playground: within seconds, the child's exact location is identified due to a RFID chip implanted under his skin, and the worried mother is able to find her child immediately.  While this scenario seems a little far-fetched, technology has been developing so quickly that a situation such as this is not as far off into the future as one would imagine.  Radio Frequency Identification, or RFID, is an electronic identification method that utilizes radio waves.  RFID can use various methods for identification, but the most common method it uses is storing a serial identification number with personal information on a chip, which is attached to an antenna and can then transmit information to a reader.  RFID chips or tags are used for storing or identifying information, and can have an unlimited amount of uses, from inventory control to human implantation.  Like bar codes, RFID is extremely useful for processes such as tracking inventory, but as an added benefit, can be read from further distances and for more complex purposes.  
Ethical Issues of RFID Technology
    Because RFID technology raises numerous ethical issues, we will evaluate these issues through utilitarian and consequence-based ethical frameworks.  ...
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