Privacy advocates are outraged at the US Food and Drug Administrations' approval of using RFID chips inside humans for medical purposes.
VeriChip, the company that makes radio frequency identification -- RFID -- tags for humans, has moved one step closer to getting its technology into hospitals.
Radio frequency identification tags aren't just for pallets of goods in supermarkets anymore.
Medical chips implanted into the human body? Privacy advocates are concerned, but such technology is already more helpful--and more common--than you might imagine.
Oracle executives, customers and sales representatives have described systemic problems that begin with the need to satisfy Wall Street's dual demands of stability and growth--a schizophrenic goal that has driven some companies to practice a kind of creative accounting that has drawn scrutiny from federal regulators.
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