Away from RFIDINREGION opinion about using RFID in tracking people and although we in the Middle East & Africa still away from thinking in using this application, the USA people live in a diverse situations about this matter.
According to InformationWeek In 2005, Lauren Scott of California is blazing a new trail in children's wear. The $2 million-a-year apparel division of DST Media Inc. will launch a line of pajamas with radio-frequency identification tags sewn into the hems. Readers positioned at various points throughout a house, such as doorways and windows, will be able to scan the tags within a 30-foot radius, and an alarm will be triggered when boundaries are breached.
"You look at these kids and think, 'I would do everything to protect them,'" says proprietor Lauren Scott, who licensed the RFID technology from SmartWear Technologies Inc., a manufacturer and supplier of personal security systems. "I'm confident other manufacturers in children's wear will follow within the next year." Scott will introduce the sleepwear in her spring 2006 collection. An estimated 250,000 pieces will begin shipping to various retail stores in December and are expected to be available to consumers by February.
In the other hand their are a protesters against RFID in Clothes and Shoes announced that:
Protesters will gather in Manhattan to greet attendees of the third annual "RFID in Fashion 2008" conference, an event organized to promote the use of RFID in clothing and footwear.
they started this with ironic title "You'd better look at your shoes, socks and underwear!"

Opinions still in diverse and every one have his own vision but still all people like to live in freedom without the feeling of being tracked all the time.






