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Welcome to Call to Decision
Subject: [Caspian-press-l] CASPIAN press release:
Oops! Did VeriChip have a"Senior Moment"?
Date: Mon, 12 Feb 2007 13:24:08 -0500
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 12, 2007
OOPS! DID VERICHIP HAVE A "SENIOR MOMENT?"
Human Chipping Company Omits Salient Risks from IPO Disclosure
VeriChip Corporation, the much-hated purveyor of the VeriChip human
ID
implant, is airing its dirty laundry this week. This is not by
choice,
mind you, but because the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
required the company to disclose its "risk factors" prior
to launching
its initial public offering of stock (IPO) Friday.
The company lays out nearly 20 pages of risk factors in its Form S-1
Registration Statement, a required document for the IPO. But what
the
company failed to reveal in its filing may be even more eye-opening,
say
CASPIAN privacy advocates Dr. Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre.
The
pair, authors of the "Spychips" series of books, have been
vocal critics
of VeriChip, dogging the company in recent years and facing down its
senior executives on radio and national television.
"Potential investors should be told how a hacker can simply
walk by a
chipped person and clone his or her VeriChip signal, a threat
demonstrated by security researcher Jonathan Westhues months
ago," says
McIntyre, who is a former federal bank examiner.
"Omitting the cloning threat from its SEC documents is a
serious
oversight that could affect the value of VeriChip's stock. This is
materially relevant information, considering VeriChip's claim that
its
product could be used to tighten security in facilities like nuclear
power plants," she adds.
(For more on VeriChip's vulnerability to hacking, see "The RFID
Hacking
Underground,' Wired Magazine,
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.05/rfid_pr.html )
Verichip also failed to disclose to investors and the SEC that
patients'
VeriChip implants might not be readable in ambulances. VeriChip's
chipping kit literature cautions that ambient radio waves, like
those in
ambulances, can interfere with the equipment that reads the
implanted
tags, but this important fact somehow didn't make its way into the
SEC
filing.
(Scanned images of VeriChip's chipping kit literature, including the
ambulance caution, are available here:
http://www.spychips.com/verichip/verichip-photos-instructions.html )
Even with crucial information missing, investors may still find
themselves scratching their heads over poorly conceived aspects of
VeriChip's business model. "Anyone reading VeriChip's SEC
filing would
have second thoughts about the stock," says Albrecht.
"Who, after all,
would invest in a company that expects patients to document their
own
medical history and blood type in a database? This could prove risky
for
anyone, not to mention the elderly, Alzheimer's, and cognitively
impaired patients that VeriChip is targeting."
She cites a passage from the registration statement that reads,
"we
anticipate that individuals implanted with our microchip will take
responsibility for inputting all of their information into our
database,
including personal health records."
Other risks identified in the VeriChip filing could also scare
investors
away. These include anticipation of ongoing multi-million dollar
loses,
the "modest" number of people willing to get chipped,
public opposition,
and the risk that the microchip may be found to damage a person's
health. The company also warns that it could be subject to lawsuits
and
loss of confidence if its patient database is unavailable in an
emergency. The company admits that the database has been unavailable
in
the past.
The market seemed to be catching on to some of these problems as
VeriChip began offering stock Friday in a bid to raise million of
dollars to fund its human chipping operations. Analysts noted a
"lukewarm reaction" to the stock and that it was trading
on "the low end
of the expected range."
To read the VeriChip Form S-1 Registration Statement (Amendment No.
7)
see:
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1347022/000119312507024937/ds1a.htm
The VeriChip implant is a glass encapsulated RFID tag that is
injected
into the flesh to uniquely number and identify individuals. The tag
can
be read by radio waves from a few inches away. The highly
controversial
device is being marketed as a way to access secure areas, link to
medical records, and serve as a payment instrument when associated
with
a credit card or pre-paid account.
=========================================
ABOUT CASPIAN
CASPIAN (Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and
Numbering)
is a grass-roots consumer group fighting retail surveillance schemes
since 1999 and irresponsible RFID use since 2002. With thousands of
members in all 50 U.S. states and over 30 countries worldwide,
CASPIAN
seeks to educate consumers about marketing strategies that invade
their
privacy and encourage privacy-conscious shopping habits across the
retail spectrum.
==========================================
ABOUT THE BOOK
"Spychips" is the winner of the 2006 Lysander Spooner
Award for
Advancing the Literature of Liberty and has received wide critical
acclaim. Authored by recent Harvard graduate Dr. Katherine Albrecht
and
former bank examiner Liz McIntyre, the book is meticulously
researched.
"Spychips" draws on patent documents, corporate source
materials,
conference proceedings, and firsthand interviews to paint a
convincing
-- and frightening -- picture of the threat posed by RFID.
Despite its hundreds of footnotes and academic-level accuracy, the
book
remains lively, readable, and hilarious, according to critics, who
have
called it a "techno-thriller" and "a masterpiece of
technocriticism."
"A chilling story about an emerging future in which spychips
run amok as
Big Brother and Big Shopkeeper invade our privacy in unprecedented
ways.”"
- Chicago Tribune
"Paints a 1984-ish picture of how corporations would like to
use RFID
tags to keep tabs on you."
- The Associated Press
=========================================
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW, PLEASE CONTACT:
Katherine Albrecht (kma[at]spychips.com) 877-287-5854 ext. 1
or
Liz McIntyre (liz[at]spychips.com) 877-287-5854 ext. 2
See: http://www.spychips.com
=========================================
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