First, the Food and Drug Administration last week approved the use of a subcutaneous radio-frequency identification chip for storing medical data. The upside is immediately apparent to those involved in health care. "A completely unambiguous way of identifying a patient would be advantageous," says Alan Abramson, CIO of HealthPartners, a Minnesota health-plan provider. But the general public already is skittish about the privacy questions around RFID, and just the mention of RFID implants gives most people the heebie-jeebies. Some fundamentalist Christians equate it to the mark of the devil referred to in the Book of Revelation, and even people with less extreme views have second thoughts about introducing hardware into their own or their childrens' bodies, especially technology potentially used for tracking.
Second, the Department of Justice released its months-in-the-making report on the prosecution of intellectual-property crimes last week, and it points a very critical finger at peer-to-peer networking, calling it "one of the greatest emerging threats to intellectual-property ownership," and making it clear that even "passive sharing" of copyrighted material should be subject to prosecution. Justice recommends that copyright holders bring legal action against companies that "intentionally induce" copyright infringement. Does that mean the entertainment industry is cleared to sue developers of peer-to-peer networking technology? We'll see.
On a lighter note, the Los Angeles Times reported last week that Oracle CEO Larry Ellison has had preliminary talks with the National Football League about purchasing a team and moving it to Los Angeles, which has been without football since the Raiders moved back to Oakland in 1995. Oracle and the NFL aren't commenting.
I don't believe it. If Larry Ellison was interested in football, I'd think he'd just buy the whole league and declare himself the winner. Can I buy an industry tip? Send it to [email protected] or phone 516-562-5326. If you want to talk about RFID and privacy, peer-to-peer networking and copyright infringement, or your football picks, meet me at InformationWeek.com's Listening Post.
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