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- Lindsey Scott
Lindsey Scott
Dernière sortie
Silicon Dust: The Global Surveillance of RFID Micro-Tracking
The traditional barcode is dying, replaced by a microscopic, practically invisible grain of silicon. Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags have quietly infiltrated the global retail supply chain, embedded inside the price tags of our clothing, the boxes of our electronics, and the pallets of our food.
Unlike barcodes, which require a direct line of sight to be scanned, RFID chips broadcast their exact serial number via radio waves.
This book exposes the hyper-lucrative B2B economy of micro-tracking. We explore how a warehouse manager can instantly inventory ten thousand pairs of jeans in seconds simply by walking through the room with an antenna. The narrative dives into the massive corporate consolidation of RFID manufacturing and the profound surveillance implications. Retailers no longer just know what you bought; they track the physical movement of the item from the sweatshop floor directly to the checkout register. Master the invisible telemetry of modern commerce.
Understand how microscopic radio broadcasters are entirely rewriting the rules of global inventory logistics.
This book exposes the hyper-lucrative B2B economy of micro-tracking. We explore how a warehouse manager can instantly inventory ten thousand pairs of jeans in seconds simply by walking through the room with an antenna. The narrative dives into the massive corporate consolidation of RFID manufacturing and the profound surveillance implications. Retailers no longer just know what you bought; they track the physical movement of the item from the sweatshop floor directly to the checkout register. Master the invisible telemetry of modern commerce.
Understand how microscopic radio broadcasters are entirely rewriting the rules of global inventory logistics.
The traditional barcode is dying, replaced by a microscopic, practically invisible grain of silicon. Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags have quietly infiltrated the global retail supply chain, embedded inside the price tags of our clothing, the boxes of our electronics, and the pallets of our food.
Unlike barcodes, which require a direct line of sight to be scanned, RFID chips broadcast their exact serial number via radio waves.
This book exposes the hyper-lucrative B2B economy of micro-tracking. We explore how a warehouse manager can instantly inventory ten thousand pairs of jeans in seconds simply by walking through the room with an antenna. The narrative dives into the massive corporate consolidation of RFID manufacturing and the profound surveillance implications. Retailers no longer just know what you bought; they track the physical movement of the item from the sweatshop floor directly to the checkout register. Master the invisible telemetry of modern commerce.
Understand how microscopic radio broadcasters are entirely rewriting the rules of global inventory logistics.
This book exposes the hyper-lucrative B2B economy of micro-tracking. We explore how a warehouse manager can instantly inventory ten thousand pairs of jeans in seconds simply by walking through the room with an antenna. The narrative dives into the massive corporate consolidation of RFID manufacturing and the profound surveillance implications. Retailers no longer just know what you bought; they track the physical movement of the item from the sweatshop floor directly to the checkout register. Master the invisible telemetry of modern commerce.
Understand how microscopic radio broadcasters are entirely rewriting the rules of global inventory logistics.