Tags are in some identity documents, airline baggage tags and even amusement park wristbands. Thin RFID tags help drivers zip through toll booths, hospitals locate tools and supermarkets track their stock. RFID, as the technology is known, is infused throughout daily civilian life. The Marines have rejected radio frequency identification technology in weapons for that very reason, and the Navy said this week that it was halting its own dalliance. The rollout on Army and Air Force bases continues even though the Department of Defense itself describes putting the technology in firearms as a “significant” security risk. military units have turned to a technology that could let enemies detect troops on the battlefield, The Associated Press has found. Determined to keep track of their guns, some U.S.
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