- Related Stories
-
Implanted ID chip finds way into ERs, bars
January 21, 2005 -
Biometric pilot program to tighten U.S. borders
November 17, 2004 -
U.S. moves closer to e-passports
October 25, 2004 -
Accenture lands Homeland Security deal
June 1, 2004
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security plans to begin issuing special identification devices to foreign visitors arriving by foot and by car by July 31, according to a Tuesday announcement from the agency.
The devices will contain microchips storing a unique identification code that's linked via government computers to document holders' names, countries of origin, dates of entry and exit, and biometric data.
The department plans to begin issuing the high-tech IDs to foreign visitors at border crossings in Nogales, Ariz.; Alexandria Bay, N.Y.; and Blaine, Wash., as part of a yearlong test of the system.
The goal of using the technology is to more easily track visitors' arrival and departure, and to catch those who overstay their visas, the agency said. It should also speed up inspection procedures at checkpoints. Border officials can simply scan the chips, which signal their ID numbers via radio frequency, from a distance and automatically gather the data they need.
The new chip system is part of the US-VISIT program, a federal initiative designed to capture and share data such as fingerprints and photographs of foreign visitors. The program, which the government put into motion a year ago, is part of a broader push to guard national security in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
The United States has processed more than 17.5 million visitors through the US-VISIT program so far and has arrested or denied entry to 407 of them because of the new procedures, the agency said.
As part of a separate but related program, the State Department is experimenting with embedding the ID devices, also known as radio-frequency identification (RFID) chips, in American passports to deter fakes and theft. The government is urging other countries to do the same.
Privacy advocates are concerned, however, that RFID technology could give governments and corporations, who've begun using it to keep tabs on inventory, too much surveillance power.
See more CNET content tagged:
visitor, RFID, agency, government, U.S.
- utopia is closer everyday
- what's gonna happen when -like it happens with cell phones- someone finds a way to clone a RFID chip, and uses to commit a crime, and you get accused of it? We are going to have to trust technology??? Wow! like it were flawless...
- Like this Reply to this comment





