Most Popular
-
Spring Break Is Still Decadent and Depraved — and Awesome, Dude!
Try as it might, Fort Lauderdale can't shake some diehard seasonal partiers
-
Solar Eclipse
Early-rising photographer becomes "cruising for cock" suspect
-
The Muscle Men
Inside the "Rejuvenation Centers" at the heart of the nation's largest illegal steroid and HGH operation
-
Priestin' Ain't Easy
For a couple of Delray padres, the high life allegedly got in the way of their priestly duties
-
Take Your Rubber Ducks And Vamoose
Merchants fight for a toehold in gentrifying downtown
-
Take Your Rubber Ducks And Vamoose (44)
Merchants fight for a toehold in gentrifying downtown
-
Spring Break Is Still Decadent and Depraved — and Awesome, Dude! (8)
Try as it might, Fort Lauderdale can't shake some diehard seasonal partiers
-
Man-Child in the Promised Land (12)
Pop star Sean Kingston hopes the party's just begun
-
Solar Eclipse (3)
Early-rising photographer becomes "cruising for cock" suspect
-
Priestin' Ain't Easy (2)
For a couple of Delray padres, the high life allegedly got in the way of their priestly duties
-
Spring Break Is Still Decadent and Depraved — and Awesome, Dude!
Try as it might, Fort Lauderdale can't shake some diehard seasonal partiers
-
Solar Eclipse
Early-rising photographer becomes "cruising for cock" suspect
-
The Muscle Men
Inside the "Rejuvenation Centers" at the heart of the nation's largest illegal steroid and HGH operation
-
Priestin' Ain't Easy
For a couple of Delray padres, the high life allegedly got in the way of their priestly duties
-
Take Your Rubber Ducks And Vamoose
Merchants fight for a toehold in gentrifying downtown
-
Foreclosure City
11:35AM 04/10/08 -
Miami Herald Cutting Staff Via Buyouts
08:19AM 04/09/08 -
Which Way The Wind Is Blowing
10:03PM 04/06/08 -
More From Enrique and Joe
07:26PM 04/09/08 -
Billboard Latin Music Conference Parties Commence
12:17PM 04/08/08 -
Throwback Tuesdays: Fine Young Cannibals
09:21AM 04/08/08
What we are writing about
- Bamboo Room
- Best DVDs of 2007
- Big Bang Radio's...
- Britney
- Chris Russo founded...
- collages juxtapose the...
- Culture Room
- Daniel Day-Lewis
- Ean Sugarman
- exclusive interview
- fearfully grandiose...
- Gryphon Nightclub
- hip-hop
- Hurricane Grill and Wings
- Museum of Art
- Phillip Estlund:...
- R. Kelly
- Revolution
- sauce choices are...
- Sevendust
- Sharon Jones and the...
- Steel Pulse
- The Best of 2007
- The Diving Bell and...
- There Will Be Blood
- Top DVD picks
- Various artists
- West Palm Beach
- world's freakiest...
- ZZ Top
Recent Articles By Eric Alan Barton
-
He Dunnit (No, He Dunnit!)
Michael Ray Roberts has avoided serious prison time by ratting out his partners. So far.
-
An' Jushtiss f'r All!
The Luckiest Perps
-
Saint Aaron
Living like a pauper himself, a young man from Broward is trying to save Haiti's children
-
The Next Ex-Mayor
After two years in office, West Palm Beach Mayor Frankel has little to show except blocked streets
-
Bullet Bob
Smooth-talking philanthropist Bob Montgomery has a dark side you don't want to see
National Features
-
Cleveland Scene
Dangerous Liaisons
Another by-product of the privatization of the Iraq War: sexual assault.
By Lisa Rab -
Seattle Weekly
The DUI King
Meet Bob Castle, a drunk who always seems to find a way to drive.
By Rick Anderson -
City Pages
"How Can This Stuff Be Legal?"
Take a toke of Salvia Divinorum and you'll wonder, too.
By Matt Snyders
Here's Lookin' at You
Continued from page 1
Published: November 25, 2004At company headquarters in the Morgan Stanley building in Delray Beach, Silverman runs a scanner over his own forearm. The device displays a number that identifies Silverman and the implanted chip hidden in the fatty tissue near his triceps. A dozen of the company's 25 employees have had the chips installed, and scanners built into doorways in the offices can prevent access to those without the chips. Silverman says the scanners are not operative but could be if heightened security were suddenly necessary. He predicts that some day the chips may be used as identification for credit card purchases, for medical information, and for government employees, including as a way for prisons to track the movement of guards.
"It'll be a long time before this chip is the only means of accessing information," concedes Silverman, wearing a jet-black suit and an unbuttoned white dress shirt. "We're talking maybe ten or 15 years, and then it will be in many people."
Silverman says the company maintains a policy that the chips should be installed only voluntarily. Applied Digital employees are not required to undergo the procedure, which involves what looks like a foot-long hypodermic needle. Even spokeswoman Fulcher admits she has not had a chip installed. "Honestly, I wanted to wait for the FDA approval," she says, "and now that we have it, I might get it in the next round of employee chipping."
Privacy advocates fear Silverman's vision of a cybernetically monitored future. Katherine Albrecht is editor and founder of Spychips.com, a website dedicated to keeping microchips out of people, and the first to discover that only 18 employees at the Mexican Attorney General's Office received the chips. Albrecht predicts that the company will begin marketing the chip as a voluntary tool, then move to get the government to force it on people. "Their business model is trying to coerce governments here and overseas to mandate the chips," Albrecht says. "It's only a matter of time before somebody suggests everyone gets these chips. Can you imagine what somebody like Hitler would have done with this kind of technology?"
Albrecht says it isn't hard to see what a microchip future would look like. Something similar has already begun at Bammel Elementary School in Spring, Texas. There, students were required for the first time this fall to keep with them ID cards equipped with radio-controlled devices that monitor their locations. School officials and police can keep track of each time a student gets off a bus or enters a school. Eventually, the community's entire 28,000-student population is expected to begin carrying the devices. Albrecht fears that the progression will be to install chips inside children, then inside workers at large companies. Then comes a future in which anyone can be tracked anywhere, thanks to a Delray company with a checkered past.









