Thursday, March 15, 2007

European Perspective on RFID Technology

European Union provides results of regional survey on RFID technology. ...

... "RFID – smart radio tags - are the keystone of the emerging Internet of Things that will connect objects and places. " ...


Via European Union: Radio Frequency IDentification RFID - The Internet of things - European Perspective

EU Telecom Commissioner Viviane Reding discusses RFID technology

Survey reveals key findings, such as mixed views on the benefits of RFID, belief in a higher risk to privacy due to RFID, and a general lack of adequate information on RFID to support education of citizens. Europeans want to continue the dialogue on the privacy risks of RFID. ...

... "Overall, 60% of respondents feel that there is insufficient information available to make an informed analysis of RFID technologies. There is therefore considerable support for awareness and information campaigns. Views on whether RFID can improve the lives of Europeans are evenly split. The benefits mentioned include food safety (identification of allergens, more comprehensive information, easier product recalls), healthcare (prevention of drug misuse, authentication) or supply chain management (fewer stocks-out, better after sales service). Privacy, health and environmental risks are among the RFID concerns given." ...

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Thursday, January 18, 2007

Lower RFID Pricing: Inventory Solutions

Axcess reduces pricing for its Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) enabled asset management solution, called Asset Activator, in order to support faster return on investment for its customers. ...

... "The unique active RFID system automatically provides precise automatic location determination, tracking, inventory counts, and physical protection for all types of enterprise assets. The reduced pricing is designed to generate an ROI for the customer of less than six months for all system sizes. The low cost RFID asset management solution enables corporations to manage assets and effectively protect intellectual property and customer privacy data. Corporations can more easily comply with state personal privacy notification laws. AXCESS' unique solution provides both management and security in one standalone package which is also capable of interfacing with the full range of existing enterprise systems. Asset Activator is installed and operating in several corporate facilities worldwide. " ...


Via Axcess: AXCESS Introduces Scalable System Pricing for RFID Physical Asset Inventory and Security Solution ...

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Thursday, January 04, 2007

Hospital RFID Realizes Patient Benefits

HP and Precision Dynamics implement patient management system based on radio frequency identification (RFID) technology in Taiwan at the Chang-Gung Memorial Hospital (CGMH). The hospital CIO sees the hospital realizing benefits through a reduction in medical errors, from root causes such as manual processes, compliance to standard operating procedures, and visibility to real-time patient status and medical process exceptions. The system is architected with PDC's RFID wristbands and HP's mobile and fixed RFID infrastructure. Privacy is managed by storing confidential patient information on the RFID chip rather than printing the information on the wristband. ...

... "CGMH implemented the RFID system in its operating rooms to improve patient safety by verifying and positively identifying patients, gathering real-time data, reducing risk of wrong-site and/or wrong-patient surgery, and ensuring compliance with hospital patient safety procedures or standard operating procedures. Since the implementation, CGMH has achieved 100% accuracy in patient ID in the OR. The new RFID system automates many manual functions of the previous operating room processes. The system helps verify that the five rights of medication safety are met - right patient, medication, dose, time, and route - as well as right surgery and surgical site. Automating patient data verification processes has saved CGMH medical staff an average of 4.3 minutes per patient. Also, automated data collection has helped prevent common manual data entry mistakes, which if gone undetected could lead to medical errors." ...


Via HP: Precision Dynamics Corporation and HP Provide Chang Gung Memorial Hospital with RFID System for Patient Management

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Monday, December 25, 2006

RFID Challenges

RFID still challenged by security and privacy issues. Use of RFID in credit cards is challenged as not being secure. And, RFID in passports is worrisome. ...

... "For example, there are about 11 million MasterCard cards in use worldwide with RFID chips. That's a fraction of the roughly 1 billion MasterCard cards in use, but issuing banks are increasingly making RFID cards the default replacement cards sent to users when their old cards expire. " ...


Via Dallas Morning News: Read

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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

RFID Nike iPod Privacy Breach

RFID in Nike Ipod kit can compromise privacy
University of Washington research demonstrates flaws in the RFID technology used in the the Nike Ipod Sport kit, that enable tracking of individuals from moderate distanced, compromising their security. Additional cryptography could be added to deal with this flaw. ...

... "As part of our research, we built a number of surveillance tools that malicious individuals could use to track Nike+iPod Sport Kit owners. Our tools can track Nike+iPod Sport Kit owners while they our working out, as well as when they are just casually walking around town, a parking lot, or a college campus. " ...


Via University of Washington: The Nike+iPod Sport Kit

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Tuesday, December 05, 2006

RFID Passport: Vicinity Read Technology Not Recommended

Smart Card Alliance responds to the State Department's October 17th Federal Register notice, recommending that the U.S. government reconsider using vicinity read RFID technology for its passport card implementation program. The Alliance sees advantages in leveraging contactless smartcard technology for the ePassport. ...

... "In its response to the State Department's notice, the Alliance provides details of its concerns with the passport card decision to use vicinity read RFID technology, and gives recommendations for measures that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Department of State could implement to improve the passport card program.

The Alliance states many advantages to using contactless smart card technology for the passport card program, including the ability to support electronic verification of authenticity to prevent counterfeiting and to use secure, encrypted communications to thwart eavesdropping and replay attacks, and ensure privacy protection for cardholders. A passport card based on contactless smart card technology can also leverage the infrastructure that is being put in place by DHS and the Department of State to support the new ePassport. " ...


Via Smart Card Alliance: Smart Card Alliance Urges U.S. Government to Reconsider Proposed Passport Card With Long Range RFID Technology

The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association working to stimulate the understanding, adoption, use and widespread application of smart card technology.

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Wednesday, November 08, 2006

ClipTag RFID: IBM LIcenses

IBM's Clipped RFID Tag gives privacy protection to the consumer through visual confirmation of the tag modification. ...

... "IBM announced it will license its acclaimed Clipped Tag technology to Marnlen RFiD, who will begin production of the tags and offer availability immediately. The Clipped Tag, developed at IBM's Watson Research Center, allows consumers to tear off the majority of an RFID tag's antenna, reducing the tag's read range to just a few inches, ensuring consumer privacy while maintaining the benefits of the technology, such as product authentication or recalls. " ...


Via IBM: IBM Licenses Clipped Tag RFID Technology to Marnlen RFiD ...

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Saturday, October 21, 2006

RFID ePassport: Security Lacking Per Alliance ...

Smart Card Alliance comes out against the RFID-enabled ePassport, citing security concerns. ...

... "Using the long read range radio frequency identification (RFID) technology the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and State Department are proposing for passport cards will do little to increase the security of the nation's borders, and opens up possibilities that U.S. citizens could be tracked, the Smart Card Alliance said today. The Alliance contends that a more privacy sensitive and secure passport card solution using the same contactless smart card technology found in the new electronic passports (ePassports) can improve border security without causing delays at crossings ... " ...


Via Smart Card Alliance: Proposed Passport Card with RFID Technology Bad News for Privacy and Security, Says Smart Card Alliance ...

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Sunday, September 10, 2006

RFID Security: NSF Funds Smart Tag Research ...

National Science Foundation, NSF, provides funding to increase the privacy and security of RFID smart tags, through better cryptographics.

... "Strengthened security for smart tags - the wireless devices that allow drivers to zip through automatic tollbooths or pass a security desk with the flash of a card - is the aim of a new initiative that has received $1.1 million from the National Science Foundation. Led by Kevin Fu of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, the researchers are developing much-needed cryptographic protocols, hardware and applications for the increasingly common devices. Millions of consumers already use smart tags—wireless devices that use radio waves to identify and authenticate people and things - and they will become more numerous, says Fu.

Kevin Fu of the University of Massachusetts Amherst investigates RFID smart tag security with NSF funding ...

Smart tags - which include Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID) tags—are already used to track items from library books to merchandise to cattle. Increasingly, they are replacing the magnetic stripe cards used in security badges and mass transit cards, sometimes also serving as electronic cash. The tags will soon be incorporated into documents such as passports; their use is being explored for tracking medical records and prison inmates. But the tags, which also include contactless smart cards and low-resource sensors, are a technology that has crept in from the edge of the Internet and they present new challenges in terms of security and privacy issues, says Fu.

The unique environment presented by smart tags - they can operate without human intervention and without a physically connected power source - presents unique security concerns, says Fu. Smart tags automatically respond to the device that reads them, so human users don't have the traditional means of giving or denying consent to the reader. This infrastructure of untrusted readers and tags requires an approach that preserves privacy while maintaining the flexibility and convenience that the tags offer.

The new consortium, dubbed the RFID ConsortiUm for Security and Privacy (RFID-CUSP), takes these operating conditions into account and is designing new cryptographic definitions, algorithms and models that will lay the solid foundation on which secure applications can be built. As part of their project, the researchers are working with the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District (BART). The project will result in the first completely open, publicly available software for experimenting with RFID security and privacy. " ...


San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District collaborates to address RFID security ...

UMass Amherst: UMass Amherst-Led Research Will Protect Consumers by Ramping Up Security for Smart Tags

Kevin Fu: "Open cryptanalysis of existing RFID protocols will give assurance in the soundness of reliable RFID technology. At UMass, we are investigating how to build secure RFID-based systems. "

The Sensor Revolution: Industry & Commerce: "Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) stands among the fastest-proliferating sensor technologies. RFID systems combine electromagnetic sensing with radio communications. RFID tags and interrogators can be used to track inventory in a warehouse or collect tolls from moving cars. "

Understanding Contactless Smart Card Technologies and Some of the Leading Reader/Card Product Providers (PDF): "That transmission could then be replayed to a reader to gain access illicitly at some time in the future. In contrast, today’s secure contactless cards and readers (such as XceedID ISO-X and HID iCLASS) employ a myriad of cryptographic techniques. These techniques encrypt data in ways that render it useless to an illicit user. Thus, traditional proximity cards and readers provide inferior communication security when compared to secure contactless smart cards and readers. "

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Thursday, August 24, 2006

Protect RFID Passport Faraday Cage ...

Paraben offers inexpensive faraday cage for sale that protects RFID devices, such as electronic passports from privacy invasion. ...

RFID Passport Protection ...

... "Paraben's Passport StrongHold Bags use faraday technology to block wireless signals to protect personal information from being read by would-be identity thieves or other people who wish to invade privacy. These bags are perfect for storing anything using RFID chips so no one can steal the information from the RFID chip. One of the biggest concerns with e-Passports is that any RFID reader could read the information contained on the passport by just being in the same vicinity as the unprotected passport. The principal behind Paraben's Passport StrongHold Bags is based on a faraday cage that blocks signals that emanate from all directions. The bags create a complete enclosure, securing personal information ... " ...

Via Paraben Forensics: RFID Passport Protection ...

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Monday, July 31, 2006

RFID Executive Conference September in DC ...

AIM sets date for Fall executive conference on RFID and auto-id ...

... "AIM Global, the industry trade association recognized as the worldwide authority on automatic identification and mobility announced plans for their third annual RFID Executive Summit and Legislative Fly-In. The event will be held from 1:00 – 7:00 p.m. on Thursday, 7 September 2006 at the Holiday Inn on the Hill in Washington, DC, USA.

RFID Executive Summit set for September 2006 in DC ...

The invitation-only meeting will bring thought leaders from RFID and Automatic Identification together in a unique networking and educational environment. The program will highlight strategic issues facing the RFID and Automatic Identification market, namely: privacy and security issues influencing acceptance of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology, latest market analysis, current state of RFID and Automatic Identification standards, and the latest feedback from key users of the technology. " ...

RFID Executive Conference September in DC: Via AIM: AIM Global Announces 2006 RFID Executive Summit ...

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Tuesday, June 20, 2006

RFID Privacy Guidelines: Ontario Canada ...

Ontario issues guidelines for RFID privacy ...
Ontario Commissioner for Information and Privacy releases privacy guidelines for the field of radio frequency identification (RFID). ...

... "RFID tags contain microchips and tiny radio antennas that can be attached to products. They transmit a unique identifying number to an electronic reader, which in turn links to a computer database where information about the item is stored. RFID tags may be read from a distance quickly and easily, making them valuable for managing inventory but pose potential risks to privacy if linked to personal identifiers. RFID tags are the next generation technology from barcodes.

Although RFID technology deployed in the supply chain management process poses little threat to privacy, item-level use of RFID tags in the retail sector, when linked to personally identifiable information, can facilitate the tracking and surveillance of individuals. The goal of these Guidelines is to alleviate concerns about the potential threat to privacy posed by this technology and to enhance openness and transparency about item-level use of RFID systems by retailers. The Guidelines address key privacy issues regarding the use of RFID technology at an item-level in the retail sector, said Commissioner Cavoukian. The Guidelines are based on three overarching principles:

Focus on RFID information systems, not technologies.

Build in privacy and security from the outset – at the design stage.

Maximize individual participation and consent. " ...

RFID Privacy Guidelines: Ontario Canada: Via Canada IPC: Commissioner Cavoukian issues RFID Guidelines and Practical Tips aimed at protecting privacy

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Sunday, June 11, 2006

California RFID Bill AB2561

New RFID bill introduced in California to address privacy ...

... "The bill, AB 2561, co-sponsored by Silicon Valley State Assemblyman Alberto Torrico, Represents a more sensible approach to privacy and remotely readable identification cards than previously proposed bill ... " ...

Via Contactless News: More balanced piece of RFID legislation proceeding in California ...

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Thursday, May 25, 2006

RFID Human Identification: Appropriate Uses ...

RFID for human identification evaluated by committee ...
Broad use of RFID technology for human identification is not supported at this time by the DHS Emerging Applications and Technology Subcommittee, due to the increase in privacy and abuse risks. ...

... "There appear to be specific, narrowly defined situations in which RFID is appropriate for human identification. Miners or firefighters might be appropriately identified using RFID because speed of identification is at a premium in dangerous situations and the need to verify the connection between a card and bearer is low. But for other applications related to human beings, RFID appears to offer little benefit when compared to the consequences it brings for privacy and data integrity. Instead, it increases risks to personal privacy and security, with no commensurate benefit for performance or national security. Most difficult and troubling is the situation in which RFID is ostensibly used for tracking objects (medicine containers, for example), but can be in fact used for monitoring human behavior. These types of uses are still being explored and remain difficult to predict. " ...

Via The DHS Emerging Applications and Technology Subcommittee: The Use of RFID for Human Identification: A DRAFT REPORT (PDF) ...

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Tuesday, May 16, 2006

RFID Concerns Issues Addressed by AIM ...

RFID privacy discussed by AIMGlobal ...
AIM president addresses RFID privacy issues ...

... "AIM Global, the professional association recognized as the worldwide authority on automatic identification and mobility, has published RFID: For the Common Good in RFID Connections. This article, written by Dan Mullen, president AIM Global, highlights RFID's proven benefits for enhancing security, safety and product authentication while addressing concerns expressed about privacy issues. " ...

RFID Concerns Issues Addressed by AIM: Via AIM: RFID: For the Common Good Addresses RFID's Concerns and Benefits ...

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Sunday, May 07, 2006

RFID Technology Healthcare Purchasing Partnership ...

Healthcare purchasing organization partners with Zebra Tech for RFID technology needs. ...
... "According to The Institute of Medicine, medical errors cause up to 98,000 deaths annually in the United States alone. Bar coding applications have been shown to substantially reduce costly and dangerous medical errors, and the recent 17th Annual HIMSS Leadership Survey found that medical error reduction and patient safety will remain top business objectives for hospital IT executives in 2006. Zebra's bar coded wristbands, unit-dose pharmacy labeling and employee badge solutions help enable patient safety improvements at the bedside and throughout the hospital with patient registration/identification, medication labeling, lab specimen collection, radiology film labeling and surgical instrument tracking applications. Bar coding and RFID are at the heart of many patient safety initiatives, says David Crist, vice president of sales at Zebra Technologies. Zebra is committed to working with Amerinet and its members to deliver these solutions in a way that minimizes medical errors and enhances safety. Zebra is a leading manufacturer of specialty thermal printing solutions including wireless, mobile and high-performance label and wristband printers designed to meet the needs of the healthcare market. Zebra also offers printing supplies, including highly durable, ready-to-print ZBand Direct wristbands, which were awarded the 2004 Frost & Sullivan Product Leadership of the Year Award in the field of medical informatics. Use of these wristbands ensures accurate patient identification and enables healthcare providers to meet patient safety and privacy standards, such as those set by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). In addition, Zebra's newly introduced antimicrobial wristband coating further improves the safety and quality of care by reducing the spread of dangerous and costly hospital infections. " ...

RFID Technology Healthcare Purchasing Partnership: Via Zebra Technologies: ZEBRA TECHNOLOGIES AND AMERINET ANNOUNCE NEW TWO-YEAR AGREEMENT: Zebra to provide Amerinet members with its full line of bar code, card and RFID printers, supplies and services ...

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Tuesday, May 02, 2006

RFID Spychips: Levi Jeans ...

Levi Strauss pilots RFID for item-level tagging. ...

... "It may be time to ditch your Dockers and lay off the Levi's, say privacy activists Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre. New information confirms that Levi Strauss & Co. is violating a call for a moratorium on item-level RFID by spychipping its clothing. What's more, the company is refusing to disclose the location of its U.S. test. Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is a controversial technology that uses tiny microchips to track items from a distance. These RFID microchips have earned the nickname spychips because each contains a unique identification number, like a Social Security number for things, that can be read silently and invisibly by radio waves. " ...

RFID Spychips: Levi Jeans: Via Spychips: RFID: SPYCHIPPED LEVI'S BRAND JEANS HIT THE U.S. ...

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RFID Tag: Pivacy Clipping ...

Clipping of RFID tag at checkout protects privacy. ...

... "One retail deployment of RFID illustrates a privacy sensitive approach. Marks & Spencer enclosed the RFID device in a tag attached to the product. At the cash register, customers were given the option of clipping off the tag. Despite not having the tag, the return policy remains the same for all customers. " ...

RFID Tag: Pivacy Clipping: Via Berkeley: To Tag or Not to Tag

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Monday, April 24, 2006

RFID Hospital: Blood Tracking ...

IBM collaborates with Japan hospital to track blood samples using RFID technology. ...

... "At the Kyoto Medical Center, under the new project, RFID tags were attached to dummy samples of plasma derivatives (about 50 units) and successfully traced. Using these RFID tags, information on the distribution and use history of the products - from the pharmaceutical manufacturer via the wholesalers to the medical institutions through to use - can be shared (federated), and the basis for a tracking mechanism can be established. In the future, multiple users, beyond the boundaries of individual industries, can make use of this kind of historical information to provide a system for enabling safe medical care. IBM Japan has built a distributed information system for seamless operation of RFID tags, while protecting a variety of highly classified medical information, such as personal information. Moreover, from the point of view of privacy, it has become possible to provide access control technology, which strictly limits access to the database and displays only the information necessary for the business at hand in systems used by multiple businesses or departments. " ...

RFID Hospital: Blood Tracking: Via IBM: Japan's first RFID tag drug-shipment-to-in-hospital medication traceability successfully demonstrated ...

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Sunday, March 12, 2006

RFID Passports US Issues

US issues RFID passports ...

... "The US has begun issuing passports that contain biometric information stored on remotely readable microchips, in spite of lingering security and privacy concerns. " ...

RFID Passports US Issues: Via Boing Boing: US starts issuing RFID passports, despite security concerns

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Thursday, March 09, 2006

RFID European Union Public Hearings ...

EU starts public hearings on RFID technology, hoping to spark debate abd understand issues. ...

... "The European Commission last year established an RFID inter-service group to co-ordinate the gathering, analysis and internal dissemination of information concerning RFID technology and its uses. Building on this, the Commission has started today to launch a wide public debate on the opportunities and challenges associated with RFID. To exploit the economic potential of RFID, privacy and consumer concerns associated with the use of RFID tags need to be handled constructively, with the assent of all stakeholders. Furthermore, to enable RFID to deliver on its potential for growth and jobs, Europe needs to agree on common technical standards, to ensure RFID interoperability across borders, and also on a common radio spectrum band for RFIDs to use. The public debate on RFID launched by the Commission today will rely on a series of workshops to build consensus on key issues associated with the use of RFID. These workshops will address RFID applications, end-user issues, interoperability and standards, and frequency spectrum requirements. They will take place in Brussels between March and June 2006 and their conclusions will assist the European Commission in drafting a working document on RFID. This document will be published in September in an online consultation. Additional feedback obtained will then be analysed and integrated in a Commission Communication on RFID, to be adopted before the end of the year. This feedback could lead to amendments of the e-privacy-Directive which is up for review this year. The Communication will also address the need for other legislative measures for RFID, such as decisions on allocation of spectrum. " ...

RFID European Union Public Hearings: Via EUROPA: Commission launches public consultation on radio frequency ID tags ...

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Saturday, February 25, 2006

RFID Privacy: Human Implants ...

Article explores the privacy concerns associated with human implantation of RFID chips ...

... "And millions of RFID chips already are in use in the United States to track everything from pets to livestock to research animals to packages shipped by truck. " ...


RFID Privacy: Human Implants: Via Toledoblade: Privacy more than skin deep ...

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Friday, February 03, 2006

RFID e-Passport Security Breach ...

... "A Dutch television program Nieuwslicht recently worked with local security firm Riscure to successfully crack and decrypt a Dutch-prototype RFID passport. " ...


Via Engadget: Dutch RFID e-passport cracked -- US next? ...

Via Riscure: Privacy issues with new digital passport: "The new digital passport lacks in the protection of personal details of the passport holder. An attacker intercepting the contactless communication between the passport and the border control system can get access to the personal information held on the chip inside the new passport. ... Riscure is a Security Lab based in the Netherlands. Riscure evaluates the security of smart cards, mobile phones and related systems for banks, credit card companies, GSM operators, smart card manufacturers, organisations deploying digital IDs and companies in the pay television industry. "

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Wednesday, February 01, 2006

California RFID Bill: In Holding Pattern

California RFID bill is in a holding pattern, while senators consider input from the radio frequency identification (RFID) industry. ...

... "At a recent conference with RFID industry professionals, the bill’s primary author, Sen. Joe Simitian [D-Palo Alto], said that his top concern is to protect the privacy of individuals. At a recent conference with RFID industry professionals, the bill's primary author, Sen. Joe Simitian [D-Palo Alto], said that his top concern is to protect the privacy of individuals. " ...


California RFID Bill: In Holding Pattern: Via SecureID News: California RFID bill holds as Senator considers industry concerns ...

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Tuesday, January 24, 2006

RFID Program: P&G EPC

P&G electronic product code (EPC) and radio frequency identification (RFID) program is focused on the opportunities in the supply chain and is sensitive to privacy concerns that consumers may have. ...

... "The Procter & Gamble Company is pursuing the use of EPC (Electronic Product Coding) to create efficiencies in the supply chain, to manage inventory, prevent theft and counterfeiting, and reduce out-of-stock levels, via case and pallet-level EPC. Down the road as we learn more about the technology, there may be opportunities to save costs and generate additional benefits for the supply chain and consumers via item-level EPC. " ...


References on P&G's RFID program ...

RFID Program: P&G EPC: Via P&G: P&G Position on Electronic Product Coding (EPC) ...

Via SAP: SAP Launches First RFID Solution to Help Customers Automate RFID-Enabled Business Processes: "Drawing upon experience from customer projects with leading companies like Procter & Gamble and the METRO Group, as well as six years of RFID research and involvement in RFID standards organizations, SAP has developed technology that will dramatically change supply chain management in the retail and consumer product industries. "

Via RFID Journal: P&G Teams With T3Ci for RFID Apps: "Procter & Gamble has signed a five-year agreement with T3Ci, a Mountain View, Calif.-based startup that has created software for analyzing Electronic Product Code (EPC) data from radio frequency identification systems. "

Via Computerworld: Early Adopters Send Mixed Messages About RFID: "Flannery said the justification is more apparent in P&G's pharmaceutical business, where RFID is viewed as a technology that can help curb counterfeit drugs and bolster consumer safety. "

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Wednesday, January 18, 2006

RFID Tag Growth Projected ...

Explosize growth in RFID is projected in the next few years. ...

... "Over 1.3 billion Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags were produced in 2005, and by 2010, that figure will soar to 33 billion, reports In-Stat. Production will vary widely by industry segment for several years, however, the high-tech market research firm says. For example, RFID has been used in automotive keys since 1991, with 150 million units now in use. This quantity greatly exceeded other segments until recently.

A recent report by In-Stat found the following: The spread and use of RFID in most sectors will be largely determined by cost, and the cost of RFID tags and labels are dropping quickly. Pharmaceutical companies are investigating using RFID tags to reduce counterfeiting and black market sales. Privacy issues have been raised concerning many uses of RFID, and currently courts and governments around the world are in the process of determining related legal issues. " ...

RFID Tag Growth Projected: Via Instat: Explosive Growth Projected in Next Five Years for RFID Tags ...

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Sunday, January 15, 2006

Block RFID RF Signals ...

Simple way to block RF signals from RFID device ...

... "With the proliferation of RFID devices and related privacy concerns, it seemed due time to create the RFID Blocking Duct Tape Wallet. There are many ways to prevent Radio Frequency ID tags from being transmitted from devices. " ...

Block RFID RF Signals: Via Dustin Kirk: How To Make A RFID Blocking Wallet

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Saturday, January 07, 2006

RFID Data Privacy: Corporate Issues ...

Corporations can extract beneficial supply chain information from RFID on goods, however it may expose people to a breach of privacy if not managed properly. RFID smart chips may end up being ubiquituous. ...

... "RFID encodes information on chips implantable in almost anything, including people. Wave an RFID scanner at them, and you can siphon off their data. " ...

RFID Data Privacy: Corporate Issues: Via The Plain Dealer: Corporations can tap into privacy, too

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Sunday, January 01, 2006

RFID Potential For Misuse: HB203 Legislation ...

New Hampshire legislation HB203 is aimed at consumer privacy protection, which would minimize the potential for misuse of RFID technology. Pat Hammond explores of the details of the HB203 legislation. ...

... "Critics of the use of RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) computer tags by manufacturers or distributors to track the buying habits of people who purchase their products say they may seem benevolent enough now but there's real potential for misuse down the road. " ...

RFID Potential For Misuse: HB203 Legislation: Via The Union Leader: Bill aims to slow RFID in its tracks ...

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Thursday, December 29, 2005

RFID People Chipping ...

RFID chipping of people is not very far away. Consumer items, passports, drugs, and other objects will have RFID tags and could serve as a mechanism for tracking and tracing people. In the references below, there are many examples where people RFID chipping is beginning. Mark Long explores the benefits and privacy concerns of RFID technology as adoption increases to solve various problems in society. ...

... "Nevertheless, the chipping of Americans may not be as far away as some people think. For one thing, RFID tags are likely to play a pivotal role in securing the next generation of American identity documents, said Bob McCullough, an analyst at The Yankee Group. " ...

RFID People Chipping: Tracked by a Tiny Chip: The Promise and Peril of RFID - Via Tech Trends - NewsFactor Network

Additional resources on the chipping of people with RFID:

Feds approve human RFID implants | Via The Register: "The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a gimmick from Florida-based Applied Digital Solutions to chip people with RFID implants - previously confined to tracking animals - thereby making it easy to access their medical records, even when they cannot, or would rather not, cooperate."

EPIC RFID Privacy Page: "In comments to the Article 29 Working Group, an association of leading European privacy officials, EPIC has recommended strong safeguards for RFIDs and techniques to track the use of digital works. EPIC's Comments on RFID (pdf) recommend a prohibition on chipping people and warn that unencrypted RFID passports pose significant security risks. "

Japan: Schoolkids to be tagged with RFID chips - Hardware - News - Via ZDNet Asia: "The rights and wrongs of RFID-chipping human beings have been debated since the tracking tags reached the technological mainstream. Now, school authorities in the Japanese city of Osaka have decided the benefits outweigh the disadvantages and will now be chipping children in one primary school. "

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Tuesday, December 27, 2005

RFID R U Tracked? ...

Devanie Angel explores the privacy issues associated with RFID technology or, as called in recent book, spychips. ...

... "But it's a Radio Frequency Identification tag, RFID for short, and each one has a tiny antenna that can broadcast information about the product, or person, to which it is attached. " ...

RFID R U Tracked?: Via AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: Are You Being Tracked? ...

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Monday, December 26, 2005

RFID Privacy: Too Paranoid?

Debate rages on slashdot regarding privacy. ...

... "We can also average out a time where Joe starts his car every single day for as long as we'd like using his OnStar information [competitionchev.ab.ca], we can determine a definitive pattern of his daily life with ease. What about the chewing gum?, simple, RFID tags gave us that info. Now this may not be a big deal considering Joe Dogooder is an upstanding citizen so he would have nothing to hide. " ...

Via Slashdot | Such a Thing as too Paranoid About Privacy? ...

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Tuesday, December 20, 2005

RFID Technology: India Investments ...

Jim Landers explores the investments in India that Dallas firms are making, in areas such as RFID technology. ...

... "It demonstrated its customer-profiling technology - which relies on radio frequency identification, or RFID, tags - to a luxury French retailer. The client backed off due to privacy concerns, but Adea is very close to a deal with a Dutch firm, said Swamy Hariharan, Adea International's chief operating officer. " ...

RFID Technology: India Investments: Via Dallas Morning News | Seeding India's Silicon Valley ...

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Sunday, December 18, 2005

TI Expands RFID Product Line

TI expands the capabilities of its Tag-It RFID transponder product line. ...

... "Expanding the scope, flexibility and potential market applications for high frequency (HF) ISO/IEC 15693 and ISO/IEC 18000-3 radio frequency identification (RFID) solutions, Texas Instruments Incorporated (TI) (NYSE: TXN) announced it is broadening its line of Tag-it transponders with new memory, data protection and form-factor options. Now offered in both 256 bit and 2,048 bit memory options, the expanded Tag-it HF-I line introduces new tracking and authentication capabilities that provide system integrators and application providers the flexibility to build a host of data protection and privacy functionality options into their RFID solutions. The new Tag-it HF-I platform now offers the only password protected write functionality for ISO/IEC 15693 compliant products in the market. It allows RFID application developers the flexibility to choose the optimum memory and level of security from a factory-locked unique ID, to user-programmed password lock with decommissioning or kill functionality, to the combination of RFID with Public-key-Infrastructure (PKI). Markets for this ISO/IEC standard solution include high-value product and asset tracking visibility, pharmaceutical supply chain authentication, library management, event and venue ticketing, and laundry and textile rental tracking. " ...

Via Texas Instruments RFID: Texas Instruments Expands Tag-it ISO/IEC 15693 RFID Product Line

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Sunday, December 11, 2005

RFID State Legislation: Privacy Regulation ...

Robert Cook explores the New Hampshire state legislation underway to regulate RFID privacy. ...

... "State lawmakers and advocates say it represents the most complete effort so far among the states to address the use of radio frequency identification, or RFID, microchips. " ...

RFID State Legislation: Privacy Regulation: New chips called a danger to privacy: Via Fosters

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Tuesday, November 22, 2005

RFID Blocking Alerts Security ...

Privacy advocate blocks his RFID device while attending conference and creates security alert. ...

RFID Blocking Alerts Security: Via InformationWeek: RFID privacy: Free Software Advocate Attracts U.N. Security After Blocking RFID Tags ...

... "Richard Stallman, GNU founder and featured speaker at the gathering in Tunisia last week, was held by U.N. security after wrapping his identification badge (RFID) in foil, ... " ...


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Thursday, November 10, 2005

RFID Privacy Implications ...

RFID has privacy implications that are being addressed to enable broader adoption of the technology. ...

RFID Privacy Implications: Via EETimes.com: Security expert: RFIDs threaten privacy ...

... "A critic of RFID technology is calling for responsible use of the tracking chips to protect individual privacy. Mary Brown, a security specialist who teaches at Capella University (Minneapolis), said RFID is an excellent tool in terms of security. ... " ...

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Monday, November 07, 2005

Anti-RFID Solutions Cost More ...

RFID privacy can be had for a price. Andrew Donoghue explores the RFID policies at BT in dealing with naysayers, such as anti-RFID organizations. ...

Anti-RFID Solutions Cost More: BT: Don't worry about RFID Luddites: Via ZDNet UK News ...

... "BT has met with some anti-RFID organisations to discuss privacy concerns, according to Neild. One solution offered by the telco was that some items would be available without RFID tags in the future but consumers would have to pay extra for such goods. " ...

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Monday, October 31, 2005

RFID: Privacy Smoking Hot Issue? ...

John Soat's satire on Supreme Court justices: confront smoking hot issues, such as RFID privacy. ...

RFID: Privacy Smoking Hot Issue?: Via InformationWeek: A Low-Key Moment With The High Court ...

... "Yeah, well, just wait till we start getting some Internet privacy cases. That new technology, RFID, has privacy lawsuits written all over it. " ...

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Saturday, October 29, 2005

RFID Art Party ...

Art reception was held using RFID tracking technology where party-goers were given RFID tags. People's viewing history was traced and analyzed using Alien RFID readers.

RFID Art Party: Via Engadget: Partygoers get RFID tagged for art's sake ...

... "RFID Tracking Party held at San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art earlier this week was to make some kind of clever, artsy, postmodern statement about privacy, society and art. " ...
RFID art party held a SF's Museum of Modern Art ...

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Thursday, October 20, 2005

RFID Position Statement: AIM

RFID Position Statement: AIM: Via AIM GLOBAL: AIM Global RFID Position Statements ...

... "As part of its commitment to address the issues pertaining to RFID implementation, AIM Global, in conjunction with its RFID Experts Group (REG), has composed a series of RFID Policy/Position statements on topics including its future uses, place in recycling, appropriate privacy safeguards, security, and intellectual property. (PDF format) " ...

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Thursday, September 01, 2005

MIT RFID Internet Project

MIT RFID Internet Project: Via Food Production Daily: MIT launches RFID, Internet project

Food Production Daily reports on the RFID Internet project at Massachusets Institute of Technology ...

... "The lab will use the system to predict the flow of data from RFID tags, and to develop data protection and privacy controls. The information will be used to guide the design of the EPCglobal Network. " ...

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Monday, August 22, 2005

RFID Sorting Door Project

Via The Sorting Door Project

... "The Sorting Door Project is an exploration of issues around Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), including of surveillance and privacy; unique identification; and classification. RFID technologies will introduce new stresses in the tension between personal privacy, and information collection and analysis. The Sorting Door is intended as a testbed for technologies and policies to address issues raised by RFID. " ...

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Saturday, August 20, 2005

RFID SB682 California Senate Bill ...

Via California: Identity Information Protection Act of 2005: SB 682 Senate Bill - INTRODUCED

... "The inclusion in identity documents of contactless integrated circuits (RFID) or other devices that broadcast data or enable data to be scanned secretly and remotely will greatly magnify the potential risk to individual privacy, safety, and economic well-being that can occur from unauthorized interception and use of personal information. The inclusion of those devices will also make it possible for any person or entity with access to a reader to engage in the secret tracking of Californians on an unprecedented scale. " ...

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Saturday, August 13, 2005

Smart Card RFID Identification ...

Smart Card RFID Identification: Via HRSA Bioterrorism and Hospital Preparedness

... "To ensure privacy and security, some States have indicated they are considering using an advanced and more expensive type of identification system, such as smart cards or programmable RFID cards. Smart cards, for example, permit easy updating of the health volunteer's complete record by storing the information on a computer chip located on the ID card itself. " ...

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RFID Smart Cards: DOD Access Control ...

RFID Smart Cards: DOD Access Control: Via The Committee on Energy and Commerce

... "Smart cards are essentially RFID systems with advanced computing power, storage, and strong encryption accelerators, offering advanced services with enhanced security and privacy protection. In fact, smart cards are so powerful that the Department of Defense (DoD) and other government agencies are adopting the technology to secure access to their facilities and computer networks, even storing a picture and fingerprint of the cardholder on the card for enhanced security control. " ...

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Sunday, July 31, 2005

DHS AIDMS RFID POE ...

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has established the United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology Program (US-VISIT), an integrated, automated entry-exit system that records the arrival and departure of covered individuals ...

... "The primary AIDMS records database is located at the DHS Data Center in Ashburn, Virginia. AIDMS interfaces, RFID tag readers, and other supporting components are located at U.S. land border Ports of Entry (POE). " ...

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Saturday, July 30, 2005

DHS USVisit RFID Implementation ...

DHS USVisit RFID Implementation: The Department of Homeland Security is creating a new system of records for the United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology Program ...

... "US-VISIT has been implemented in increments. As part of Increment 2, US-VISIT will test the use of passive radio frequency identification (RFID) tags to automatically, passively, and remotely record the entry and exit of covered individuals. These RFID tags will be embedded in the Form I-94 or I-94W, which is an Arrival-Departure Record issued to a traveler. " ...


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RFID POE Pilot Point of Entry

United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) is the program established by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to implement an integrated entry and exit data system to record the entry into and exit out of the United States of covered individuals; verify identity; and confirm compliance with the terms of admission to the United States.

... "The proof of concept for technology and processes for automatically recording the entry and exit of covered individuals at U.S. land border POEs using Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)-enabled I-94 Arrival/Departure Forms. The proof of concept of the capability will begin in August 2005 and, if successful, will be deployed to the 50 busiest land ports by December 31, 2007. " ...

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Friday, July 22, 2005

RFID Informational Forum Panel

Berkeley Public Library

... "The Berkeley Public Library announces a New Date for the Community Informational Forum on Radio Frequency Identification (RFID): RFID: What's It All About? Berkeley Public Library is holding a Community Informational Forum on Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) at the South Berkeley Senior Center, 2939 Ellis Street, Berkeley, on Monday, August 1, 2005, 6:30-9:00 pm. For accessibility questions and more information, call (510) 981-6121, TTY 510-548-1240. Come learn how RFID works, in general, and how it functions in a library setting. One group of expert panelists will address issues of RFID technology such as: What It Is, Uses & Experience; Software Technology; and Public Health and Ergonomic Issues. A second group of expert panelists will address RFID policy issues such as: Privacy; Security; Best Practices. There will be time set aside for questions and comments from the community. " ...

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Sunday, July 17, 2005

RFID HIPAA Implications

RFID HIPAA Implications: Testimony by Richard Seelig for the January 11, 2005 NCVHS Subcommittee on Privacy and Confidentiality Hearings

... "RFID usage will not impact on or expand on HIPAA's covered entities or business associate categories or their compliance requirements. The VeriChip RFID microchip is HIPAA-friendly, because it doesn't convey a name or any information identifier, only a number that is read by a proprietary scanner which is registered to a healthcare facility. " ...

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RFID Technology Information Security

RFID Technology Information Security: Publications: Cyberterrorism & Computer Technology

... "The reduced cost of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology, an electronic data-capture system for identifying, storing, and tracking information, has made widespread use possible in government and industry. This report discusses the current status of RFID standards and interoperability, potential legal issues, and security and privacy considerations surrounding this technology. " ...

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Saturday, July 09, 2005

The Facts on RFID: Benefits and Implications ...

The Facts on RFID: Benefits and Implications: Office of Congressman :: Joe Barton

... "It is our job to cut through the hype, get the facts about RFID, learn more about its applications, and examine the pubic policy issues generated by its use and widespread deployment. The benefits to our homeland security could prove the most beneficial aspect of the technology, Barton, chairman of the full Energy and Commerce Committee, continued. The capability to track imports and containers will enhance our ability to monitor what is coming across our borders and where it goes. Similar applications related to controlled substances and hazardous materials shipped to or within the states will provide an additional layer of security we would all welcome. Hearing witnesses included Linda Dillman, chief information officer for Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., and Sandra Hughes, global privacy executive for The Proctor & Gamble Company, who each testified to the consumer applications of RFID. Testimony was additionally heard from one of the leading scientists in RFID technology, Dr. Sanjay Sarma, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as well as witnesses from the American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Privacy Information Center, who testified on the possible privacy implications of RFID technology. " ...

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Wednesday, June 29, 2005

RFID ePassport Document Authentication ...

RFID ePassport Document Authentication: The Sultanate of Oman Selects Viisage for Border Management Solution; Viisage Document Authentication Solution to Validate Travelers Documents at Airports, Seaports, and Land Borders ...

... "Automated document authentication provides the broadest form of document validation for countries today. As countries move to develop their electronic passport programs, the Viisage iA-thenticate solution can support both radio frequency ID (RFID) read of the chip on an e-passport, as well as authentication of non e-passports. Such border management initiatives as the US VISIT, a US Department of Homeland Security program designed to enhance national security and promote legitimate travel, mandate the eventual adoption of biometrically enabled e-passports. " ...


Viisage (NASDAQ: VISGE) delivers advanced technology identity solutions for governments, law enforcement agencies and businesses concerned with enhancing security, reducing identity theft, and protecting personal privacy. Viisage solutions include secure credentials such as passports and drivers' licenses, biometric technologies for uniquely linking individuals to those credentials, and credential authentication technologies to ensure the documents are valid before individuals are allowed to cross borders, gain access to finances, or granted other privileges. With over 3,000 installations worldwide, Viisage's identity solutions stand out as a result of the Company's industry-leading technology and unique understanding of customer needs. Viisage's product suite includes FaceTOOLS SDK, Viisage PROOF, FaceEXPLORER, iA-thenticate, BorderGuard, FacePASS and FaceFINDER.

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Monday, June 20, 2005

RFID Privacy Commentary: Passports

Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Technology: What the Future Holds for Commerce, Security, and the Consumer: The Committee on Energy and Commerce: Mr. Barry Steinhardt, Director of the Technology and Liberty Program, The American Civil Liberties Union

... "Today, I will explore with you the risks to privacy of governmental uses of RFID tags in identification documents, and the risks to consumer privacy of use of RFID tags by the private sector. I will close by suggesting that Congress play an active role in deciding whether to authorize governmental use of RFID tags in U.S. passports. " ...

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Tuesday, June 14, 2005

RFID Policy Summit DC

RFID Policy Summit DC: Washington, DC RFID Summit Focuses on Business and Policy Issues: Experts Discuss Need for Harmonized Global Standards and Smart Data Security Policies: Global Leader in RFID Applications Aims to Advance the U.S. Policy Dialogue, Educate Washington Policymakers and Influencers ...

SAP sponsors an RFID policy summit in DC in collaboration with the US Chamber of Commerce to educate leaders on the opportunity offered by adoption of RFID technology and to identify policy implications that need to be addressed ...

... "Building on its core commitment to help customers improve efficiency and competitiveness, the world’s leading provider of business software solutions, SAP AG (NYSE: SAP), today co-hosts a global policy summit in Washington, DC, that will focus on the significant opportunities presented by radio frequency identification (RFID) technology, as well as concerns that are hindering its adoption. The summit—cosponsored by SAP and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s National Chamber Foundation—brings together senior leaders of government, business and independent advocacy groups for a high-level discussion of RFID’s business and policy implications, including the many ways that RFID can boost economic competitiveness, global trade and security. The summit will also address the need for harmonized global RFID standards and smart data security and privacy policies that protect consumers and allow rapid innovation. " ...


SAP has been conducting RFID research since 1998 and is a driving force in developing and implementing business applications of RFID technology. The company supports the development of globally harmonized, industry-driven standards such as those set forth by EPCglobal Inc™, an initiative of leading research institutes and global organizations. SAP is an active member of EPCglobal, participating in three action groups. SAP was also a founding member of EPCglobal’s forerunner, the Auto-ID Center at MIT.

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Saturday, June 04, 2005

RFID Smart Card: Encryption Acceleration

The Committee on Energy and Commerce

... "Smart cards are essentially RFID systems with advanced computing power, storage, and strong encryption accelerators, offering advanced services with enhanced security and privacy protection. In fact, smart cards are so powerful that the Department of Defense (DoD) and other government agencies are adopting the technology to secure access to their facilities and computer networks, even storing a picture and fingerprint of the cardholder on the card for enhanced security control. The DoD makes worst case scenario assumptions about the cards falling into the wrong hands and having large resources at their disposal to crack the card -- standards that advanced smart cards have met through the use of encryption, secure design, and other measures. " ...

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Monday, May 23, 2005

RFID Technology Event: Today...

RFID Tech Talk ...

... "RFID Event: May 23, 2005, RFID Tech Talk at the National Press Club, 6:30 PM, Call Jean at 202-662-7129 or e-mail opus@press.org

Sponsored by The National Press Club High Tech Committee, NPC Conference Rooms

TECH TALK on RADIO FREQUENCY IDENTIFICATION (RFID)

Speakers
Mr. Alan Estevez, Assistant Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Supply Chain Integration
Mr. Michael Meranda, President, EPCglobal Consortium
Dr. Sanjay Sarma, CEO, OATSystems, Inc.
Paula Bruening, J.D., Counsel, Center for Democracy and Technology
Dr. Robert Atkinson, VP, Progressive Policy Institute
Ilisa Bernstein, Pharm. D., J.D., Sr. Advisor for Regulatory Policy, Food and Drug Administration

RFID is a transformative technology that improves the delivery, safety and efficiency of how products get to consumers; RFID will dramatically improve in-transit visibility, the ability to see products as they move from point A to B, in the global supply chain costs the retail industry $180 billion-$300 billion annually, or 6 to 10 percent of total supply chain spending, and it is an important issue for the Department of Defense; RFID in US Passports and credit cards might be exploited by unscrupulous businesses and terrorists; How and why privacy advocates are attempting to curtail RFID deployment by raising a host of claims about the technology; Pharmaceutical drugs can be better tracked to prevent counterfeiting. Shipping containers that reach our ports can be checked for tampering. And best of all, products will be on the shelf when and where you want to buy them; " ...

RFID event today at the National Press Club: RFID Technology Discussion with an experienced panel ...

The Club shall provide people who gather and disseminate news a center for the advancement of their professional standards and skills, the promotion of free expression, mutual support and social fellowship.

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Monday, May 09, 2005

RFID Tags: Medical

Testimony by Richard Seelig for the January 11, 2005 NCVHS Subcommittee on Privacy and Confidentiality Hearings

... "The first set of applications revolved around the identification of implanted medical devices such as pacemakers and orthopedic hardware. In my clinical experience and discussion with colleagues the need for improved rapid acquisition of accurate detailed technical information regarding these devices was lacking causing many delays and inefficiencies in patient care. I believed that an implantable passive RFID available when needed, linked to an Internet accessible database could provide a clinician access to the need information many months after the procedure was performed and at any facility throughout the country. " ...

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Sunday, May 08, 2005

RFID Readers: Where Headed? ...

Agenda

... "Experts predict Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology will replace the bar code in the next decade, because of the efficiencies it creates. Unlike bar codes, RFID tags can be made in tiny formats, some no larger than a grain of salt, and the tags don't have to be manually scanned. Instead, RFID tags send out a radio signal that can be captured at a distance and at indirect angles by RFID readers, eliminating the need for an employee with a hand-held scanner to read a label. Retailers and manufacturers hope to save millions by automating the shipping and inventory process and reducing theft using RFID. In late August 2003, Wal-Mart announced it would require its top 100 suppliers to put RFID tags on all pallets and cases of shipped products by January 2005 and require the rest of its suppliers to begin using RFID tags by 2006. Privacy advocates fear RFID will become as omnipresent as video surveillance and give marketers another method of tracking people's movements and shopping behaviors. " ...

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Saturday, May 07, 2005

Proctor Gamble RFID Privacy Guidelines ...

Radio Frequency IDentification: Applications and Implications for Consumers ...

... "Workshop panelists also discussed the privacy guidelines adopted by Procter & Gamble (“P&G”), another company involved in RFID trials both in the U.S. and abroad. In addition to its global privacy policy, P&G has developed an RFID-specific position statement calling for clear and accurate notice to consumers about the use of RFID tags and consumer choice with respect to disabling or discarding EPC tags “without cost or penalty” as well as disclosure of whether any personally identifiable information about them is electronically linked to the EPC number on products they buy. Further, P&G stated at the Workshop that it will not participate in item-level tagging with any retailer or partner that would link personal information about consumers using RFID, other than what they do for bar codes today. ” ...

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Sunday, May 01, 2005

ALA RFID Principles ...

ALA | 2005-MW-AS

... "Resolution On Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Technology and Privacy Principles, which read: That the American Library Association endorses the Book Industry Study Group (BISG) Policy Statement Policy #002: RFID-Radio Frequency Identification Privacy Principles developed by the Intellectual Freedom Committee and the Office for Information Technology Policy (OITP) with the BISG and other working groups; " ...

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Wednesday, April 27, 2005

RFID Technology: Where Headed ...

Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Technology – Where Is It Headed? ...

... "Experts predict Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technologywill replace the bar code in the next decade, because of the efficiencies it creates. Unlike bar codes, RFID tags can be made in tiny formats, some no larger than a grain of salt, and the tags don't have to be manually scanned. Instead, RFID tags send out a radio signal that can be captured at a distance and at indirect angles by RFID readers, eliminating the need for an employee with a hand-held scanner to read a label. Retailers and manufacturers hope to save millions by automating the shipping and inventory process and reducing theft using RFID. In late August 2003, Wal-Mart announced it would require its top 100 suppliers to put RFID tags on all pallets and cases of shipped products by January 2005 and require the rest of its suppliers to begin using RFID tags by 2006. Privacy advocates fear RFID will become as omnipresent as video surveillance and give marketers another method of tracking people's movements and shopping behaviors. " ...

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Surgichip RFID Reader Security ...

Testimony by Bruce Waxman for the January 11, 2005 NCVHS Subcommittee on Privacy and Confidentiality Hearings

... "SURGICHIP is HIPAA compliant. The chip is programmed by a designated professional in a private environment; entry into the computer program is password protected. The data encoded on the chip are retrievable by using a custom designed RFID reader only; it is intended for the exclusive use of the surgical team. The information on the chip is encrypted. Only an RFID reader equipped with SURGICHIP software can read the encoded information. Entry into the handheld terminal SURGICHIP software is password protected; entry into the handheld terminal itself can also be password protected at the discretion of the medical center. " ...

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Tuesday, April 26, 2005

ACLU RFID Passport Computer Chips ...

American Civil Liberties Union : ACLU Seeks Information On Government Tests of Controversial Passport Computer Chips

... "At issue are Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags, which the government is planning on embedding in all U.S. passports in the coming year. These RFID tags (sometimes called contactless integrated circuits) will allow anyone with a RFID reader to access and duplicate the contents of passports that come within range of a reader." ...


The FOIA requests to the State Department and NIST, as well as a report on documents obtained through a previous request, are available at www.aclu.org/passports.


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Monday, April 11, 2005

Smart Card Technology Conference ...

Smart Card Technology Conference: Viisage to Present and Exhibit at CardTech/SecurTech 2005 Conference in Las Vegas; Company to Demonstrate FIPS 201 Identity Solutions Capability

Viisage to present its identity technology solutions at the imminent smart card conference ...

... Viisage (NASDAQ: VISGE), a leading provider of advanced technology identity solutions, announced today that the Company will be presenting and demonstrating its latest identity solutions capabilities at the CardTech/SecurTech 2005 conference at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center in Las Vegas on April 11-14. CardTech/SecurTech is the premier smart card technology conference in the United States, focusing on physical and logical security technologies and solutions. ...


Viisage (NASDAQ: VISGE) delivers advanced technology identity solutions for governments, law enforcement agencies and businesses concerned with enhancing security, reducing identity theft, and protecting personal privacy. Viisage solutions include secure credentials such as passports and drivers' licenses, biometric technologies for uniquely linking individuals to those credentials, and credential authentication technologies to ensure the documents are valid before individuals are allowed to cross borders, gain access to finances, or granted other privileges. With over 3,000 installations worldwide, Viisage's identity solutions stand out as a result of the Company's industry-leading technology and unique understanding of customer needs. Viisage's product suite includes FaceTOOLS(R) SDK, Viisage PROOF(TM), FaceEXPLORER(R), Viisage iA-thenticate(R), BorderGuard(R), FacePASS(TM) and FaceFINDER(R).

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Saturday, April 09, 2005

Responsible RFID: Is Item Level Necessary?

Implementing RFID Responsibly, Calling for a Technology Assessment: Testimony submitted to the Federal Trade Commission RFID Workshop, Washington, D.C. by Beth Givens, Director Privacy Rights Clearinghouse ...

... "Can many of the benefits of RFID be accomplished without resorting to the placement of a unique identifier, called the Electronic Product Code (EPC), on each and every consumer product that is released into the marketplace? For example, one benefit of RFID that has been touted is to label toxic materials contained inside computer products, such as components containing lead or nickel-cadmium. This application of RFID could make it much easier to separate out such materials when they are headed for the landfill. Yet, such materials do not need the fully unique identifier, only a generic tag that emits the code for lead or for nickel-cadmium. There may be many other ways to benefit from the RFID technology without embedding unique identifiers on each and every product, right down to each individual can of Coke, for example." ...

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RFID Chain Dependency Security Implications ...

RADIO FREQUENCY IDENTIFICATION AND PRIVACY ...

... "However, one of the most important issue to be solved is what could be called chain dependency that is, the manufacturer may include a RFID tag in a product for his/her own supply chain reasons, the supply chain and security reasons of the retailer or to enable the customer benefits. This means that the right type of RFID chip must be used to satisfy everybody’s needs in the chain. ...

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RFID EPC Drug Imports

Comments for the Task Force on Drug Importation: Secure Symbology, Inc. is offering comments to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Task Force on Drug Importation as charged by HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson to study what it would take in terms of oversight and resources to safely import drugs ...

... "We recognize that the ultimate goal of RFID, through its data carrier, the Electronic Product Code (EPC™), is to serialize every manufactured product down to the item level. But because of the huge infrastructure costs, high tag costs, questions concerning ISO standards, hacking and privacy concerns, implementation to the items level is, by most standards, 5 – 10 years away. The ability to track, trace and provide an electronic database and an electronic pedigree cannot wait 5-10 years for item level serialization while U.S. states, counties and it’s citizens bring pharmaceutical products in from Canada and other foreign countries. DOD and Wal-Mart driven mandates may elicit some success in the next few years at the container and/or pallet level, but even at this level, data synchronization still is a major issue." ...

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Tuesday, March 29, 2005

RFID 2005 Workshop April 6th ...

Joint C4ISR Decision Support Center

... "April 6, 2005

Technology Administration - Radio Frequency Identification: Workshop with Industry

Description: Apr 6, 2005 - Washington, DC
U.S. Department of Commerce
1401 Constitution Ave, NW
Washington, D.C. 20230

RFID in 2005 - Technology Administration & Industry Perspectives will engage stakeholders on the latest advances in RFID technology to include: the benefits of RFID, technology development efforts, current and future applications, and privacy and security considerations.

On April 6, 2005, the U.S. Department of Commerce will host a workshop to discuss Radio Frequency Identification (RFID). This event builds on the April 2004 “From RFID to Smart Dust: The Expanding Market for Wireless Sensor Technologies” workshop, held jointly by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration and the Technology Administration. “RFID in 2005 – Technology & Industry Perspectives” will engage stakeholders on the latest advances in RFID technology to include: the benefits of RFID, technology development efforts, current and future applications, and privacy and security considerations.

CONTACT: Dr. Sujata Millick
sujata.millick@technology.gov, 202-482-6804
or,
Andrea Da Silva
andrea.dasilva@technology.gov, 202-482-0383" ...

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Thursday, March 24, 2005

RFID Employee Monitoring Notification Legislation ...

SB 1841 Senate Bill - Bill Analysis

... "The Privacy Rights Clearinghouse (PRC) argues that: Because of advances in technology, workplace monitoring can be virtually ubiquitous, covering all aspects of employees work, even extending beyond the workplace. Monitoring can be conducted of electronic mail, voice mail, telephone calls, computer keystrokes, internet access, locational tracking via GPS and RFID [radio frequency identification device], and video surveillance. " ...

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Sunday, March 20, 2005

RFID E-briefs Senator Bill Nelson ...

E-briefs from the office of US Senator Bill Nelson

... "Bill also has weighed in on another privacy issue regarding a new technology being used by businesses, as well as the United States government. The technology, called Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), uses microchip tags with miniature antennae that are attached to objects and then used to collect consumer information such as the cost, date of purchase, and even the color of an item. Without consumers' knowledge, businesses or employers could use scanners to read the information being transmitted about the tagged products. For example, retailers could scan the contents of a woman's purse as she enters their stores, or employers could scan the contents of employees' backpacks to see what medications are being carried. If abused, the technology could pose a significant range of privacy and security risks." ...

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Radio Frequency Identification Workshop Report ...

FTC Releases Radio Frequency Identification Workshop Report

... "The report and workshop continue the Commission's work on consumer privacy and technology issues, exploring how RFID works, its various applications, and its anticipated uses. RFID involves tiny tags embedded with computer chips that communicate with devices called readers, which are capable of scanning information stored on multiple tags from a distance. A tag can contain information that uniquely identifies the item to which it is attached, such as an electronic product code. As the report describes, RFID technology has important implications for businesses, consumers, and policymakers. Companies are turning to RFID to manage warehouse inventory and to stock retail shelves. Consumers are using RFID tags when they travel on highways, purchase gas and groceries, and protect their pets. RFID also has significant potential for government use as a public safety and anti-counterfeiting tool. " ...

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Saturday, March 19, 2005

RFID Privacy Considerations ...

DHS | Department of Homeland Security

... "The RFID technology used by US-VISIT will safeguard sensitive information. The tags will not include visitors biographic or biometric information. Rather, they will contain only a serial code that links to a visitors information securely stored in databases used by US VISIT. It will also be tamper-proof and difficult to counterfeit." ...

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Friday, March 18, 2005

RFID-Enabled Surgery ...

Testimony by Bruce Waxman for the January 11, 2005 NCVHS Subcommittee on Privacy and Confidentiality Hearings

... "SURGICHIP is an FDA approved, patent pending system using RFID technology to help prevent wrong-site, wrong-patient, and wrong-procedure surgery; it is a new use of preexisting technology. A computer chip encoded with the pertinent data is affixed to the skin with biocompatible adhesive and is removed prior to the incision; the chip is not implanted inside the body. SURGICHIP is used in addition to the other usual safeguards against wrong-site surgery, including the JCAHO Universal Protocol (yes or the surgeon's initials / signature are written on the incision site with indelible marker and a time out is taken to review the operative consent and verify the patient's identity). With SURGICHIP in place it is less likely that the surgical team will forget to check the operative consent or the patient's identifying wristband. The possibility that the wrong chart will be used and the incorrect procedure therefore performed is minimized since the chip, which has been verified by the patient while awake, does not physically leave the patient until the surgical prep begins. " ...

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RFID Smart Cards Identification Technology ...

The Committee on Energy and Commerce

... "Contactless identification technology is also used for personal identification, including in so-called smart cards. Smart cards typically come in a credit card form factor and carry sensitive, personally identifiable data. American consumers are likely to encounter smart cards and similar RF-enabled personal identification devices in their daily lives through applications such as secure access cards for building entry, speedy gasoline purchasing such as the Exxon Speedpass, vehicle anti-theft systems, and in transportation systems all over the world, including in the Minneapolis, San Francisco, Seattle, San Diego (in Subcommittee member Congressman Issa's district), Houston, and other systems. Smart cards are essentially RFID systems with advanced computing power, storage, and strong encryption accelerators, offering advanced services with enhanced security and privacy protection. In fact, smart cards are so powerful that the Department of Defense (DoD) and other government agencies are adopting the technology to secure access to their facilities and computer networks, even storing a picture and fingerprint of the cardholder on the card for enhanced security control. The DoD makes worst case scenario assumptions about the cards falling into the wrong hands and having large resources at their disposal to crack the card -- standards that advanced smart cards have met through the use of encryption, secure design, and other measures. " ...

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Wednesday, March 09, 2005

RFID Privacy and Security Continue as Priority ...

Privacy, Information Security Continue as Top FTC Priorities

... "Parnes said new technology can offer great benefits but can also raise privacy concerns. She said that radio frequency identification, or RFID, which stores unique electronic product codes that can wirelessly transmit that code to a reader device is one such new technology. While beneficial applications include inventory management, pharmaceutical drug safety, health care and transportation technology like easy-pass lanes, some people are concerned that the technology will enable the tracking of products into consumers homes. " ...

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Saturday, February 26, 2005

Homeland Security RFID Fact Sheet ...

Homeland Security RFID Fact Sheet: Fact Sheet on Radio Frequency Identification Technology

Homeland Security develops fact-sheet, or position paper, on the role of RFID in the US VISIT program ...

From Department of Homeland Security (press release) ... Radio frequency (RFID) identification technology refers to wireless systems that allow a device to read information contained in a wireless device or “tag ...

... US VISIT is exploring the use of RFID technology as a tool that will better enable the program to fulfill its goals, which are to enhance the security of our citizens and visitors, facilitate legitimate travel and trade to and from the United States, ensure the integrity of our immigration system and protect the privacy of our visitors. RFID technology can improve the ability to match entries to exits without impacting processing time at the land borders and record arrivals and departures of a visitor in pedestrian and vehicle lanes – rapidly, accurately and reliably. It will also allow US VISIT to detect a visitor’s tag and provide the primary inspection process with information and a mechanism for establishing an accurate and timely record of exits without slowing a traveler through the process. Finally, RFID can also provide solutions that are not invasive and that protect the privacy of visitors.

Overview: As US VISIT moves toward improving the automated entry-exit system at the nation’s land border ports of entry, RFID technology offers a potential solution for an entry-exit operation that better facilitates legitimate travel and trade. Radio frequencies emanating from RFID tags are far below the levels that could cause any harm to human health and below the typical ambient radio frequencies most people are exposed to in the United States on a daily basis from devices such as TVs and radios. Like these other devices, RFID tags and readers are regulated and their safety is certified by the Federal Communications Commission. ...


US-VISIT continues to test technologies that will help it better achieve its mission to enhance security of our citizens and visitors while facilitating legitimate travel and trade across our borders.

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Homeland Security RFID Fact Sheet ...

Homeland Security RFID Fact Sheet: Fact Sheet on Radio Frequency Identification Technology

Homeland Security develops fact-sheet, or position paper, on the role of RFID in the US VISIT program ...

From Department of Homeland Security (press release) ... Radio frequency (RFID) identification technology refers to wireless systems that allow a device to read information contained in a wireless device or “tag ...

... US VISIT is exploring the use of RFID technology as a tool that will better enable the program to fulfill its goals, which are to enhance the security of our citizens and visitors, facilitate legitimate travel and trade to and from the United States, ensure the integrity of our immigration system and protect the privacy of our visitors. RFID technology can improve the ability to match entries to exits without impacting processing time at the land borders and record arrivals and departures of a visitor in pedestrian and vehicle lanes – rapidly, accurately and reliably. It will also allow US VISIT to detect a visitor’s tag and provide the primary inspection process with information and a mechanism for establishing an accurate and timely record of exits without slowing a traveler through the process. Finally, RFID can also provide solutions that are not invasive and that protect the privacy of visitors.

Overview: As US VISIT moves toward improving the automated entry-exit system at the nation’s land border ports of entry, RFID technology offers a potential solution for an entry-exit operation that better facilitates legitimate travel and trade. Radio frequencies emanating from RFID tags are far below the levels that could cause any harm to human health and below the typical ambient radio frequencies most people are exposed to in the United States on a daily basis from devices such as TVs and radios. Like these other devices, RFID tags and readers are regulated and their safety is certified by the Federal Communications Commission. ...


US-VISIT continues to test technologies that will help it better achieve its mission to enhance security of our citizens and visitors while facilitating legitimate travel and trade across our borders.

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Sunday, February 20, 2005

RFID Forum Wireless Sensors ...

RFID Forum Notice 03-01-2004

... "Wireless Sensor Technology Forum

AGENCY: National Telecommunications and Information Administration, United States Patent and Trademark Office, Technology Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce

ACTION: Notice of Public Meeting

SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce's National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), and Technology Administration (TA) will host a half-day forum on sensor technologies, entitled 'From RFID to Smart Dust: The Expanding Market for Wireless Sensor Technologies.' The first panel will address the future market for sensor technologies by examining a variety of wireless sensor technologies, along with the current and potential future uses by industry and government. Panelists will include researchers, market analysts, and industry and government users. The second panel will address public policy issues facing sensor technologies such as spectrum use, privacy and security, and intellectual property. Panelists will include representatives from companies and government, as well as public policy analysts.

DATES: The Wireless Sensor Technology Forum will be held from 9:00 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. on Thursday, April 1, 2004.

ADDRESSES: The forum on wireless sensor technologies will be held at the U.S. Department of Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Auditorium, Washington, D.C. (Entrance to the Department of Commerce is on 14th Street between Constitution and Pennsylvania avenues.)

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wendy Lader, Office of Policy Analysis and Development, NTIA, at (202) 482-1880, or electronic mail: wlader@ntia.doc.gov. Please direct media inquiries to the Office of Public Affairs, NTIA, at (202) 482-7002. " ...

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RFID: Workshop with Industry, April 6, 2005 ...

RFID: Workshop with Industry, April 6, 2005, Department of Commerce

... "Technology Administration, RFID: Workshop with Industry

On April 6, 2005, the U.S. Department of Commerce will host a workshop to discuss Radio Frequency Identification (RFID). This event builds on the April 2004 From RFID to Smart Dust: The Expanding Market for Wireless Sensor Technologies workshop, held jointly by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration and the Technology Administration. RFID in 2005 Technology & Industry Perspectives will engage stakeholders on the latest advances in RFID technology to include: the benefits of RFID, technology development efforts, current and future applications, and privacy and security considerations.

WHERE: U.S. Department of Commerce
1401 Constitution Ave, NW
Washington, D.C. 20230

WHEN: Wednesday, April 6, 2005
9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m." ...

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Sunday, February 13, 2005

School RFID System Pushback ...

Wired News: School RFID Plan Gets an F: Kim Zetter, Wired News, writes about the protests against an RFID tracking system put in place in a California town. The school RFID system was intended for attendance tracking and security. InCom Coorporation makes the InClass RFID application that was used in this pilot.

InCom Corporation is the exclusive developer and manufacturer of the InClass™ attendance taking, reporting and security system. The Company's founders have extensive teaching, educational technology and network administration experience. The Company has developed the first complete RFID based system for taking, recording and reporting attendance in schools. InClass™ is a unique automatic attendance and data capture system (patent pending), that combines several state of the art technologies for the school and the classroom.

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Sunday, January 30, 2005

RFID Technology Combats Counterfeit Drugs ...

Combating Couterfeit Drugs with RFID Technology

From FDA ...

RFID Issues that the FDA is Watching ...

Standards development:
should occur simultaneously with pilot studies, waiting to begin implementing RFID until standards are fully developed may be problematic

Technical issues:
optimal use of frequencies in the supply chain, obtaining 100% read rates

Product Quality:
voluntary collection of data on the effect of RF energy on drugs to inform future testing requirements (if any), special attention to liquids and biologics

Privacy:
Industry very sensitive to this issue

Database:
security, access, ownership

FDA has identified RFID technology as essential in the fight against counterfeit drugs

It is a reliable pedigree from the point of manufacture to the point of dispensing is essential to assuring a safe drug supply. RFID can provide such a pedigree. Therefore, FDA has identified RFID as the cornerstone in the fight against counterfeit drugs.

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Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Homeland Security Drives RFID Technology for Border Management ...

Homeland Security Drives RFID Technology for Border Management: Homeland Security Announces Plans to Test Radio Frequency ...

From PR Newswire (press release) ... announced today that US-VISIT is continuing to improve the border management system by planning tests of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology at ...

... Asa Hutchinson, Under Secretary for Border and Transportation Security for the United States Department of Homeland Security, announced today that US-VISIT is continuing to improve the border management system by planning tests of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology at the U.S. land border. ...


The goals of US-VISIT are to enhance the security of our citizens and visitors; facilitate legitimate travel and trade; ensure the integrity of our immigration system; and protect the privacy of our visitors. US-VISIT is a continuum of security measures that begins overseas and continues through entry and exit. Experience has shown that the US-VISIT enrollment process is fast, easy to understand and simple for visitors.

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Monday, January 24, 2005

Leadership on Implantable RFID and Privacy Matters ...

Implantable RFID and Privacy Matters: Applied Digital's VeriChip Corporation Strengthens its Washington ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... The VeriChip product is a sub dermal RFID micro transponder that can be used in a variety of security, financial, emergency identification and healthcare ...

... Applied Digital (NASDAQ: ADSX), a provider of Security Through Innovation(TM), announced today that its wholly-owned subsidiary, VeriChip Corporation, has retained Oldaker, Biden & Belair and DCI Group to join its Washington team. VeriChip's Washington team focuses on ensuring the Company takes a responsible, patient-oriented leadership role on privacy matters; educating Congress and other leaders on VeriChip's utility for certain applications; and generating government-based revenue from federal agencies that have needs for VeriChip's loss-proof, tamper-proof identification technology in the medical and security arenas. Bob Belair, one of the principals of Oldaker, Biden & Belair, formerly served as General Counsel of the National Commission on the Confidentiality of Health Records and is recognized internationally as a leader in privacy matters. DCI Group is a full-service public affairs firm with broad experience in the technology industry. Clients include Microsoft and AT&T. ...


Based in Washington, Oldaker, Biden & Belair, LLP is a law firm offering a full range of services in the legal, consulting and lobbying spheres. Founded by principals with over thirty years experience, the firm is ideally positioned to advise and shepherd the interests of a diverse and international clientele from a wide array of sectors. Oldaker, Biden & Belair's network of contacts throughout the private sector, the Executive Branch and Congress enables the firm to react speedily to a client's needs, answer a client's questions and ultimately solve a client's problems. This network allows the firm to monitor effectively a client's issues from legislation to implementation. The consulting and lobbying practice advises clients on a diverse number of public policy issues with particular focus on privacy, technology, and international trade.

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Wednesday, January 12, 2005

AIMGlobal RFID Technology Members Expands Again ...

AIMGlobal RFID Technology Expands: TrenStar Joins AIM Global

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... to AIM's outreach efforts to increase understanding and adoption of auto ID technologies including radio frequency identification (RFID) through education ...

... TrenStar Inc. announced today at the ProMat trade show that it joined AIM Global, the association for Automatic Identification and Mobility that for more than 30 years has advocated auto ID and mobility solutions through industry standards development and the support of a global channel network. As a member company offering mobile asset management solutions enabled by the latest auto ID technology, TrenStar will contribute to AIM's outreach efforts to increase understanding and adoption of auto ID technologies including radio frequency identification (RFID) through education, standards and cooperation with other leading industry associations. ...


TrenStar is the first company to offer mobile asset management. From the start in 2001, TrenStar's singular mission has been to buy, track and manage high-value containers for customers throughout asset-intensive industries. TrenStar offers one complete outsourced solution that combines asset acquisition, tracking technology and management services all for a per-use fee, so customers, and eventually entire industries, reduce operating expenses, improve customer service and manage assets and their contents effectively. TrenStar's clients include Carlsberg UK, Coors Brewers Limited, Kraft and Goodyear. Ranked as the top software developer in the Denver area and named a Deloitte Technology Fast 500 Rising Star in North America, TrenStar has offices in Denver, the United Kingdom, Australia and South Africa. TrenStar is privately held, and the primary shareholders are Trencor Limited, The Carlyle Group and the Leede Companies. AIM Global is the association for and worldwide authority on automatic identification, data collection and networking in a mobile environment. AIM members are providers and users of technologies, systems and services that capture, manage and integrate accurate data into larger information management systems. As a not-for-profit industry organization, AIM's mission is to stimulate the understanding, adoption and use of AIM technology by providing timely, unbiased and commercial-free news and information.

Additional resources on AIM Global RFID technology ...

AIM Global - The Association for Automatic Identification: provider of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) products for global customers in ... Copyright AIM, Inc ... Fax: +1 724 934 4495 Email: info@aimglobal.org Privacy ...

RFID Experts Group Moves to AIM Global: said AIM Global President Dan Mullen. "AIM, as the industry trade association for RFID and other automatic identification and data collection technologies, was ...

AIM Global and CompTIA Collaborate on RFID Certification: Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA) and AIM Global (the Association ... certification program for radio frequency identification (RFID) technology. ...

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Monday, December 06, 2004

Comments on the Smart Card Forum ...

From Consumer Privacy and Smart Cards — A Challenge and an Opportunity ...

... "The consumer should be educated about what a smart card is. A brief description of how smart cards work may be helpful in dealing with consumers. The following may be useful general information in doing that. There are two basic kinds of smart cards. An intelligent smart card contains a microprocessor that actually stores and secures information and makes decisions as required by the card issuer's specific application needs. New information can be added to these cards and processed by the microprocessing unit. Monetary value, for example, can be added or debited as required. The second type of card is better described as a memory card. These cards are primarily information storage cards that contain stored value which the consumer can spend in a pay phone, retail, vending or related transaction. Many of today's prepaid telephone cards are memory cards. In both types of cards, the integrated circuit chip allows the stored information to be protected from damage or theft. " ...

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Sunday, November 28, 2004

RFID Privacy and Security in Drug Track and Trace ...

From Importation of Prescription Drugs, U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, Testimony of Philip Lee, M.D., Former Chancellor University of California, San Francisco, Professor Emeritus, San Francisco University, and Former HHS Assistant Secretary for Health ...

... "add a word of caution about the track and trace technologies. These are based on radio frequency identification (RFID) tagging of products by manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers. This appears to be the best approach available and there is an enormous literature on this topic. A web search of this issue for pharmaceuticals leads to more than 100,000 hits, and there are professional journals and trade publications solely devoted to RFID. I believe two issues still need to be fully addressed: (1) security and (2) privacy, particularly when large databases link products purchased by individual patients. I am not an expert in either of these areas, but this committee may wish to review the whole matter after it receives the Secretary's report on importation." ...

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RFID Privacy Implications ...

From US Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation, Competition, Foreign Commerce, and Infrastructure Hearing, Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Reauthorization
Testimony of Mr. Marc Rotenberg, Executive Director, Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) ...

... "the Commission should begin to consider new technologies that have significant privacy implications for consumers in the marketplace. For instance, RFID, or Radio Frequency Identification chips may enable tracking of individuals in the physical world the same way that cookies do on the Internet. This week Microsoft announced that it plans to support RFID applications in future versions of its software. It would be appropriate for the FTC to begin the process of exploring how these new tracking techniques may affect consumer confidence and whether new safeguards may be required. There is a clear need to enable the Federal Trade Commission to work in cooperation with consumer protection agencies in other countries to investigate and prosecute cross-border fraud and deceptive marketing practices. New legislation will be necessary to accomplish the goal. Nevertheless, the bill should be drafted in such a way so as to safeguard important American values, including procedural fairness, privacy protection, and open government. These principles of good government will assist consumer protection agencies around the world combat cyber fraud, and will help strengthen democratic institutions. " ...


The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) is a public interest research center in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1994 to focus public attention on emerging civil liberties issues and to protect privacy, the First Amendment, and to promote the Public Voice in decisions concerning the future of the Internet.

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RFID Tire Identification Developments ...

From US Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation, Competition, Foreign Commerce, and Infrastructure Hearing: TREAD Act Revisited, The Testimony of The Honorable Bruce Starr, Oregon State Senator ...

... "Michelin and Goodyear have both introduced Radio Frequency Tire Identification (RFID). The Michelin system utilizes a tiny transponder cured directly into the tire. The transponder can store vital tire identification information such as when the tire was made, the maximum inflation pressure, tire size, and the vehicle identification number of the vehicle on which it is mounted. Goodyear's TireIQ system relays specific tire information to drivers through the computer chip and sensor built into the tire. This system will warn the driver when improper inflation is detected. Goodyear is also looking at using the RFID system in its supply-chain operations by being able to track exactly where each tire is at all times. To insure consumer privacy, the RFID would be disabled at the point of sale. " ...

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RFID Passports: Documents Show U.S. Ignored Security and Privacy Warnings On Passports; Decisions Will Leave Americans Vulnerable to Violence, ID Theft, ACLU Says ...

From American Civil Liberties Union ...

... "The Bush Administration spurned warnings by privacy and security experts and foreign governments when pushing new remotely readable biometric passports, according to State Department documents obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union. Because of the U.S. action, passports issued to Americans in coming years will contain Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) chips that will broadcast all the personal information on a passport to anyone who comes within range with an RFID reader." ...

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Friday, November 26, 2004

Barton on RFID Privacy ...

From Office of Congressman :: Joe Barton ...

... "Tiny radio tags on products can cut costs through improved inventory control and faster check-out, and they might even help in the war on terror, but the technology also poses a challenge to privacy advocates, U.S. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Ennis, said Wednesday. The new application of this old technology promises some great benefits, said Barton, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee at a subcommittee hearing. Tagging products with Radio Frequency Identification devices can lower costs to manufacturers, retailers and consumers, and make American goods more competitive overseas. Tags that can be tracked outside the store by the seller or a third party also raise questions about how to ensure the privacy rights of buyers, and that will require careful examination of the facts and hard work to avert, he noted." ...

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Wednesday, November 24, 2004

Leahy on RFID: Leahy Urges Privacy Protection in New Patient Microchip

From U.S. SENATOR PATRICK LEAHY, Vermont ...

... "Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is an exciting technology that promises incredible opportunities and enhancements in fields as diverse as health care and retailing to law enforcement and agriculture. The RFID technology employed by VeriChip raises unique concerns because of its tiny size, its likely ubiquity and its potential for surreptitious scanning. The possibilities of vast networks of databases containing Americans' medical records prompts serious questions about how much of that information will be stored and shared, about who will have access to that information, and about the conditions that will govern access to those records. " ...

Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is an exciting technology that promises incredible opportunities ...

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Monday, November 22, 2004

RFID Privacy Principles: Applied Digital Announces Six Point Privacy Statement at ID World ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... Recognizing the Company's role in the development of RFID technology world-wide, Mr. Silverman stated in his speech at the conference that: "It is our duty ...

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Sunday, November 21, 2004

RFID Privacy Discussion

From Congressional Record: March 23, 2004 (Senate), Page S2989-S2990, Mr. Barry Steinhardt, Director of the Technology and Liberty Program, The American Civil Liberties Union ...

... "The privacy issues raised by RFID tags are vitally important because they are representative of a larger trend in the United States: the seemingly inexorable drift toward a surveillance society. As Congress considers the privacy issues posed by RFID chips, I urge you to view them in the larger context -- a world that is increasingly becoming a sea of data and databases, where the government and private corporations alike are gathering more and more details about our everyday existence. The explosion of computers, cameras, sensors, wireless communication, GPS, biometrics, and other technologies in just the last 10 years is feeding what can be described as a surveillance monster that is growing silently in our midst. Scarcely a month goes by in which we don�t read about some new high-tech method for invading privacy, from face recognition to implantable microchips, data-mining to DNA chips, and now RFID identity tags. The fact is, there are no longer any technical barriers to the creation of the surveillance society. While the technological bars are falling away, we should be strengthening the laws and institutions that protect against abuse. Unfortunately, in all too many cases, even as this surveillance monster grows in power, we are weakening the legal chains that keep it from trampling our privacy. " ...

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RFID Privacy Recommendations ...

From The Committee on Energy and Commerce ...

... "Recommendations: Legislation should protect consumers from improper use and sharing of data in both the public and the private sector. The legislation would address all forms of RFID-based services, from travel security to employee monitoring, child tracking and amusement park patron management. Congress should rule on legislation specifically targeting the use of RFID in the retail sector and require clear labeling and easy removal of item-level RFID tagging on individual consumer products. Clear labeling and easy removal of tags will ensure that consumers receive proper notice of RFID systems and are able to confidently exercise their choice whether or not to go home with live RFID tags in the products they own. Notice and choice are in fact two key components of the Fair Information Practices and elements that consumers value, as shown in many opinion polls. Consumers without high levels of technical capability have no way of knowing if a killed tag is merely disabled, physically destroyed, or in fact still fully functional. Tag removal, on the other hand, is transparent and 100 percent effective. " ...

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RFID Privacy Discussion Points

From The Committee on Energy and Commerce ...

... "New risks for privacy: The debate over RFID technology touches upon many controversial policy issues. At its most fundamental, widespread use of RFID tags could enable corporations to track every move consumers make. Corporations which compile the data transmitted by the tags could determine which products a consumer purchases, how often products are used, and even where the product -- and by extension the consumer -- travels. By aggregating data to form consumer profiles, corporations could make inferential assumptions about a consumer's income, health, lifestyle, buying habits, and travels. This information could be sold to governments to create dossiers of individual citizens, or simply sold to other corporations for marketing purposes. While the ability of RFID readers to collect data from tags once a consumer has left a store or moved beyond the readers' range is currently limited, many consumer groups and privacy advocates note that RFID technology is quickly advancing, while measures to protect individual privacy by limiting the amount and type of information corporations can collect about consumers is lacking. There have been several cases in the past year where the technology of RFID has been used without informing consumers. In the retail industry, for example, some retailers have collected information on their customers unbeknownst to them without providing them with the most basic notice. " ...

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RFID Update

From Congressman Cliff Stearns, Trade & Consumer Protection Subcommittee ...

... "The most common commercial application of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) uses radio waves to transmit data from a transmitter called a tag to a scanning device called a reader, which can be networked with a computer database, explained Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-FL), Chairman of the Commerce, Trade & Consumer Protection Subcommittee. These RFID tags can be attached by manufacturers and retailers to products and packaging for tracking large bulk containers and pallets along the supply chain. One possible application of this technology involves using readers at a store checkout - consumers place tagged items in their shopping cart, pass through the checkout where the items are read, and their accounts are automatically updated without waiting in line,' said Stearns. 'However, this point of sale application raises privacy issues and these questions. Will I be able to disable or remove the tag? What happens to the data harvested from my purchase? How secure is that data, and what prevents third parties from accessing and misusing that information? The subcommittee heard testimony from a distinguished panel of witnesses from academia, business, and consumer privacy organizations. Representing WalMart, the world's largest retailer, Linda Dillman, Executive Vice President & Chief information Officer, outlined the company's use of RFID. 'Currently, cases and pallets of 21 products from eight suppliers destined for one distribution center and seven Supercenters in North Texas are being tagged. The readers assist Wal-Mart in knowing when a product is received, where it is stored, when it goes on the sales floor, if it returns for any reason, and when the case is submitted for recycling." ...

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Thursday, November 11, 2004

RFID Security: Open Security Exchange Announces New Members

From Yahoo News (press release) ... Deister Electronics joined the Open Security Exchange as a General Member. "As a leading developer and manufacturer of RFID technology and equipment, Deister ...

... The Open Security Exchange (OSE), a cross-industry consortium dedicated to delivering best practices guidelines in the area of security management and vendor-neutral interoperability specifications for the integration of physical and cyber security systems, today announced two new members. GE Infrastructure, Security joined the Open Security Exchange as a Board Member. ...


The Open Security Exchange, a program of IEEE-ISTO, was created to address today's most significant security challenge -- the lack of integration between various components of the security infrastructure. The Open Security Exchange is a cross-industry forum dedicated to delivering vendor-neutral interoperability specifications and best practices guidelines in the area of security management. This enables organizations to more efficiently mitigate risk, optimize their security postures and enforce privacy policies. The Open Security Exchange combines the disparate technologies that form today's security infrastructures, allowing for optimal security and operational efficiencies while respecting organization-specific operational requirements. Effective security management will result in: accurate detection of threats and attacks; consistent definition and enforcement of security policies; and enhanced organizational collaboration. Current Board members of OSE are Computer Associates, CoreStreet, Fargo, Gemplus, HID Corp., Software House, Siemens Building Technologies, Siemens ICN, Sony Electronics, Inc., and VistaScape. Deister Electronics is a General member.

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Sunday, October 24, 2004

RFID Smart Cards: CARTES 2004, Leading Exhibition For Smart Card Markets ...

The CARTES 2004 show presents a complete and international view of the entire industry: card manufacturers and issuers, RFID and biometrics technology, manufacturing machines, components manufacturers, supply manufacturers, card personalising, engineering, terminals and readers. The CARTES show has been compbined with the IT Security 2004 show.

... The development of RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) technology for contactless products and solutions, combined with biometrics capabilities, represent recent advanced techniques. A special session focusing on RFID and biometrics technologies will be held at Cartes & IT Security 2004, from 2 to 4 November, at Paris-Nord Villepinte exhibition c