Saturday, March 24, 2007

RealTime RFID Cargo Tracking Pilot in Asia

Oracle and Savi Technology collaborate to implement real-time the location tracking of cargo containers shipped from Hong Kong to Japan. The pilot project with GS1 EPCglobal has been completed. ...

Hong Kong cargo in RFID pilot

... "The milestone project was the first time that real-time information generated from active, battery-powered RFID tags on sea containers was exchanged with EPC Information Services (EPCIS), a draft GS1 EPCglobal standard enabling trading partners to communicate in a common computer language on objects moving throughout the supply chain. The communication interface with the EPCIS Server and Repository was enabled through integration of Oracle Sensor Edge Server, a component of Oracle Fusion Middleware, as well as Savi Site Manager operating software and active RFID tag and data collection systems. " ...


Via Oracle: Oracle and Savi Technology Provide Critical Information Link to Track Active RFID-Tagged Containers Shipped from Hong Kong to Japan ...

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Wednesday, January 31, 2007

RFID Readiness Assessments: Tagging Objects

Avnet Technology Solutions and Stratum Global create partnership to focus on enterprise mobility solutions incorporating the RFID capabilities of TagNet. TagNet enables tracking of RFID-tagged objects (products, assets, or individuals). ...

Tag and track objects with RFID technology

... "The Avnet Enterprise Mobility team leverages its technical expertise and market experience to help partners develop and implement complete, custom enterprise mobility solutions encompassing hardware, software and services. The new relationship with Stratum Global complements Avnet's Enterprise Mobility initiative by providing RFID solutions for access control, asset management, compliance, high-volume conveyor tagging and closed-loop inventory location management. Stratum Global's TagNet RFID solution suite supports a variety of vertical industries, including defense, education, healthcare, hospitality and manufacturing. TagNet seamlessly integrates with most enterprise resource planning and business intelligence applications for complete end-to-end RFID event management.

As part of the new relationship between Avnet and Stratum Global, participating Avnet partners will be trained and certified to perform comprehensive RFID readiness assessments. The readiness assessments include an in-depth business analysis for end customers and the creation of a roadmap for developing and implementing RFID solutions. By working with Avnet and Stratum Global, channel partners can design and implement custom, integrated RFID hardware and software solutions for their customers, as well as establish plans for long-term scaleable end solutions. " ...


Via Avnet Inc.: Enterprise Mobility RFID Solutions

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Saturday, January 14, 2006

RFID Mobile Asset Management

IBSS introduces RFID-enabled mobile asset management solution to create a real-time view of assets and their movements. Benefits are lowering asset shrinkage and accelerating asset location. Active RFID enables the identification of mobile assets. ...

... "Integrated Business Systems and Services, Inc. (IBSS) announced its new offering, the SynTrack Mobile Asset Management system , a new product created for organizations seeking more efficient asset utilization by the use of RFID and wireless technologies. Simultaneously, IBSS also announced an agreement establishing IDENTEC SOLUTIONS as a certified Value Added Reseller of SynTrack Mobile Asset Management. Today, organizations spend millions of dollars on expensive equipment only to have it lost or stolen. Annual losses can range from thousands to millions of dollars. By having a real time view of where these assets are, when and where they move, and how they are managed, companies can significantly reduce these losses as well as improve worker efficiency in locating critical equipment.

SynTrack Mobile Asset Management is IBSS' application for real time, dynamic tracking and management of assets and personnel. It allows organizations to locate, track and manage expensive, important equipment utilizing active RFID technology. Developed on IBSS' proprietary Synapse platform, the system is quickly and easily configurable to nearly any asset tracking application across commercial vertical markets. SynTrack Mobile Asset Management is ideally suited for applications in Energy, Government, Manufacturing, Security, and many other industries. Installation is quick and easy. The system is configured intuitively by defining a hierarchy of zones, tags and tag groups so assets can be quickly located. Important assets and/or desired personnel are equipped with RFID tags. These tags are sensed by strategically placed RFID readers and antennas that communicate with the SynTrack Mobile Asset Management system as a tagged object passes through a geographically defined zone. " ...

RFID Mobile Asset Management: Via IBSS: IBSS INTRODUCES SynTrack MOBILE ASSET MANAGEMENT ...

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Wednesday, August 17, 2005

RFID Enables Extreme Data ...

RFID Enables Extreme Data: Via CSC: EXTREME DATA REVOLUTIONIZING THE WAY COMPANIES DO BUSINESS, SAYS CSC REPORT ...

... "Extreme data has added two important aspects to data: time and place. The integration of location-detection technologies, digital cameras, real-time sensors, wireless and mobile devices, and geographic information systems allows applications to determine when and where people and things are, and other real-time information. This data provides powerful digital bearings that make individuals and businesses smarter, safer and more precise. Location-detection technologies such as GPS and radio frequency identification (RFID), coupled with map data, enable four key capabilities: location awareness, dynamic mapping, object tracking and rapid identification. " ...


Founded in 1959, Computer Sciences Corporation is a leading global IT services company. CSC’s mission is to provide customers in industry and government with solutions crafted to meet their specific challenges and enable them to profit from the advanced use of technology. With approximately 78,000 employees, CSC provides innovative solutions for customers around the world by applying leading technologies and CSC’s own advanced capabilities. These include systems design and integration; IT and business process outsourcing; applications software development; Web and application hosting; and management consulting. Headquartered in El Segundo, Calif., CSC reported revenue of $14.3 billion from continuing operations for the 12 months ended July 1, 2005.

Tag:

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Friday, June 24, 2005

RFID Autonomous Construction Systems

RFID Autonomous Construction Systems: BFRL: 2005 Project Information

... "Recent efforts in the IACJS road-mapping initiative have identified approximately twenty-five critical research areas as ranked by leading industry representatives from DOW, Black & Veatch, Fluor, Intel, GSA, CH2MHill, and others. Construction object recognition and tracking is a component of at least ten of these research areas. The combination of LADAR scanning technology, real-time object recognition, automatic identification (RFID), and tracking technologies (e.g. UWB, GPS) provide powerful potential mechanisms for assessing real-time status of construction site operations and lay ground work for autonomous construction systems. " ...

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Sunday, June 05, 2005

RFID Embedded Systems ...

Embedded Systems RFID: Radio frequency identification (RFID) is an automated data-capture technology that can be used to electronically identify, track, and store information contained on a tag that is attached to or embedded in an object, such as a product, case, or pallet ...

... "An embedded system is a special-purpose computer system that is used within a device. An embedded system has specific requirements and performs predefined tasks, unlike a general-purpose personal computer. To date, embedded RFID chips have been tested in smart test tubes that store data about the tube's contents, which has facilitated obtaining correct information for identifying specimens and time-stamping doctor's orders. Embedded chips in credit cards and mobile phones for contactless payments are also expected to become increasingly popular in Asia. Embedded RFID chips are being proposed for use in numerous applications, including electronic passports, tires to determine wear, drug containers for tracking and theft control, and aircraft for maintenance. " ...

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Saturday, April 09, 2005

EPC Network RFID Tags ...

Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Technology: What the Future Holds for Commerce, Security, and the Consumer: VeriSign is the leading provider of critical infrastructure services for the Internet and telecommunications networks ...

... "An Electronic Product Code (EPC) embedded on an RFID tag provides a unique number that can be assigned to individual items in cases and pallets within the supply chain for identification and tracking. With the EPC network, computers that use RFID technology to identify objects can acquire associated information about that object, enabling manufacturers to track items and materials throughout the supply chain. This technology will revolutionize the way products are manufactured, sold and bought. VeriSign was selected to operate this network by EPCglobal, a non-profit joint venture of the Uniform Code Council (which manages the allocation of bar codes) and the EAN International (which provides similar services internationally) responsible for driving the global adoption and implementation of the EPCglobal Network across industry sectors. " ...

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Friday, March 04, 2005

EPC Electronic Product Code: Connecting to a Sustainable Future

EHP 111-9, 2003: Connecting to a Sustainable Future

... "Before the end of this decade, there will be an Internet of things. The Auto-ID Center, a partnership of almost 100 global companies and 5 of the world's leading research universities, is developing a global infrastructure that will allow computers to identify any object anywhere in the world instantly, through the use of radio-frequency identification tags. Every product, and even individual parts, will have its own unique identity (an electronic product code, or ePC) burned onto a tiny microchip equipped with an antenna.

A global computer network, layered on top of the Internet, has been developed to coordinate and process the mountains of information this system will generate. For business, radio-frequency identification tags will revolutionize management of the supply chain, eliminating all guesswork from inventory control, allowing precise fulfillment of demand, and facilitating optimized cradle-to-grave tracking of products, including recycling and refurbishment. Observers are optimistic that the system will generate substantial environmental benefits as well. Obviously, massive potential gains in efficiency could eventually translate into massive energy savings. " ...

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Electronic Product Code Update to Committee on Energy and Commerce

The Committee on Energy and Commerce

... "An Electronic Product Code (EPC) embedded on an RFID tag provides a unique number that can be assigned to individual items in cases and pallets within the supply chain for identification and tracking. With the EPC network, computers that use RFID technology to identify objects can acquire associated information about that object, enabling manufacturers to track items and materials throughout the supply chain. This technology will revolutionize the way products are manufactured, sold and bought. VeriSign was selected to operate this network by EPCglobal, a non-profit joint venture of the Uniform Code Council (which manages the allocation of bar codes) and the EAN International (which provides similar services internationally) responsible for driving the global adoption and implementation of the EPCglobal Network across industry sectors. " ...

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Monday, December 06, 2004

RFID Network: Ubisense Ultrawideband Location Devices Certified by US FCC

From PR Newswire (press release) ... While traditional radio frequency identification (RFID) technology is becoming the standard for managing product manufacturing and the distribution supply ...

... From developing new and productive ways to utilize office space to locating patients, medical staff and equipment in hospitals to managing innovative lighting for stage shows, Ubisense Smart Space uses patented and patent pending technology to create an ultrawideband-based network inside a building capable of locating a person or object in three dimensions to within 6 inches in real-time. The devices comprising the platform today received certification from the Federal Communications Commission to operate in the United States. ...


With offices in Denver, Colo. and Cambridge, England, Ubisense is the Smart Space company whose location aware sense-driven platform increases the value, usability, and security of space. Ubisense utilizes ultrawideband (UWB) technology to deliver cost-effective, scalable products for the intelligent tracking of thousands of objects to 6-inch 3D accuracy, in real-time.

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Monday, July 12, 2004

RFID Middleware: epcSolutions Leapfrogs Competitors With Latest Release ...

From Yahoo News (press release) ... GREAT FALLS, Va., July 12 /PRNewswire/ -- epcSolutions, Inc., the industry's leading EPC(TM)/RFID middleware provider, has announced a new release of their ...

epcSolutions has taken a strong leadership role in developing the standards that guide EPC-enabled RFID technology currently, and in ensuring the effectiveness of those standards in the future. We have joined forces with EPCglobal, which, through a joint venture between the Uniform Code Council (UCC) and EAN International, is charged with establishing and supporting the EPC Network as the global standard. Prior to the formation of EPCglobal, epcSolutions had worked closely with its predecessor, the Auto-ID Center, which developed the initial EPC and related technologies. The potential advantages of RFID to global trade are too great to ignore. In the coming years we will observe the deployment of tens of billions of autonomous devices: manufactured goods, products and distributed assets linked to, or sensed by, the network. Meanwhile, companies are beginning to consider the effects of attempting to conduct business via these devices; for example, the reduction in supply chain costs and the future efficiencies associated with RFID-tagged goods...

By co-deploying an EPC-enabled RFID solution with a responsive, automated document network, epcSolutions creates the definitive middleware solution platform enabling the value chain of the future: ThingsNet. ThingsNet allows a true evolution in the business process, seamlessly integrating with enterprise applications such as ERP, BPM, warehouse management, supply chain management, and manufacturing execution systems—without risk and without pain; a total solution that is manageable and highly scalable. ThingsNet is about a network data integration layer between the edge application and an enterprise system that facilitates inter- and intra-enterprise, cross-platform business interactions. ThingsNet is about seamless and painless integration with your business management processes and legacy infrastructure. And, ThingsNet is about easily tracking a product throughout its lifetime, finding an object anywhere in the supply chain.

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Monday, June 07, 2004

RFID Tags: SAT Corp.'s Handhelds Help Refineries Quickly Spot Problems

From ComputerWorld ... based SAT Corp. that marries handheld devices, radio frequency identification (RFID) tags and workflow applications. Workers are ...

SAT Corporation is the leading provider of integrated field force automation solutions for process manufacturing industries. For process-intensive enterprises, the integration of manufacturing decision support systems with mobile field workers has proven to be labor intensive, time consuming, and costly. SAT Corporation's integrated field force automation software and technology provide a practical, intelligent solution. Our IntelaTrac® enterprise software enables data collection, field force management, asset tracking and integration capabilities that fully extend enterprise and manufacturing decision support systems to mobile field workers through wireless handheld computers, like those offered by Symbol Technologies. Based on Adaptive Process Management, a rules-based workflow model for implementing field force automation solutions around complex processes, IntelaTrac software has been successfully deployed by Fortune 500 companies and other organizations and has produced significant, documented cost savings.

SAT's IntelaTrac® Work Process Management System is based on Adaptive Process Management (APM), a rules-based workflow model for implementing field force automation solutions around complex processes. Within the structure of this APM model, the data collection, field force management, asset tracking, and integration capabilities of IntelaTrac fully extend enterprise manufacturing decision support systems to mobile field workers. IntelaTrac software was designed from the ground up to operate on multiple mobile computing operating systems and platforms, and integrate seamlessly with a variety of back-end CMMS enterprise manufacturing, planning, and decision support systems. Using a suite of integrated modules, IntelaTrac software optimizes flexibility in addressing specific tasks and goals, and it allows for expansion to meet future needs.

RFID is the most advanced asset tracking and identification tag technology available today. It provides positive identification and automatic data transfer between a tagged object and a reader, which speeds data collection and improves the quality of data by validating asset and location information. Further, RFID tags have read/write capabilities, so tag data can be updated in the field with mobile computing devices. SAT's MA V wearable computer is designed to fit securely and comfortably on the body using a complete range of Xybernaut-designed vests, belts, and cases. Xybernaut has taken great care to consider key ergonomic, comfort and function issues or body placement, access, weight balance, materials, freedom of movement, hygiene and body support to ensure seamless human-computer interaction.

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Tuesday, June 01, 2004

RFID Mobile Solutions: Ekahau Touts 802.11 Tag

From Unstrung ... Unlike RFID or Infrared based solutions, the T101 tag is not required to be in the close proximity of a reader gate or scanner. ...

Ekahau, Inc. is the industry leader in location-enabling Wi-Fi networks. Ekahau´s mission is to provide the easiest, most cost effective and accurate positioning solutions for locating mobile devices and people in wireless networks. Ekahau solutions enable our partners at all levels to easily track people and assets for a variety of demanding applications. Devices that Ekahau can track includePDAs, laptops, Wi-FI tags and other 802.11 enabled wireless appliances. Ekahau’s underlying location technology was developed at the Complex Systems Computation Group in University of Helsinki, one of the leading research groups in the world. The core technology has been evolved with over ten years of intensive study. The company is owned by its’ employees and venture capital investors. The name Ekahau is derived from the god of travelers and merchants in Maya mythology. Leveraging the award-winning Ekahau Positioning Engine (EPE) software platform, the Ekahau T101 Wi-Fi tag enables real-time people and asset tracking in any standard Wi-Fi network. The T101 tag can be attached to any mobile object or asset, and can be carried by people as well. The Ekahau Positioning Engine software reports the continuous location and movements of the tag within Wi-Fi coverage area both indoors and outdoors.

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Monday, May 24, 2004

RFID Privacy: Remarks Of Senator Patrick Leahy... The Dawn of Micro Monitoring: It's Promise, And Its Challenges To Privacy And Security

From the Conference On “Video Surveillance: Legal And Technological Challenges” at Georgetown University Law Center... And one of the most dramatic and dazzling new challenges we all will be facing soon is the emergence of a relatively new, surveillance-related technology called radio frequency identification -- R–F–I–D for short. RFID tags are tiny computer chips that can be attached to physical items in order to provide identification and tracking by radio. Their potential invasiveness is obvious from their size, which, as shown in this picture, already is surprisingly small. And they will only get smaller.

In their basic function, RFID chips are like barcodes, which by now are ubiquitous in our stores and offices and crime labs and manufacturing plants. But RFID chips are like supercharged barcodes – barcodes on steroids, if you will. They are so small they can be tagged onto almost any object. They do not have to be in open view; RFID receivers just have to be within the vicinity – at a security checkpoint, in a doorway, inside a mailbox, atop a traffic light. And RFID chips can carry a lot more information than barcodes. Some versions are recordable so that they can carry along the object's entire history.

RFID chips are more powerful than today’s video surveillance technology. RFIDs are more reliable, they are 100 percent automatic, and they are likely to become more pervasive because they are significantly less expensive, and there are many business advantages to using them. RFIDs seem poised to become the catalyst that will launch the age of micro-monitoring...

Leading retailers like Wal-Mart and Target – as well as the Department of Defense -- are requiring its use by suppliers for inventory control. Fifty million pets around the world have embedded RFID chips. Of course, many of us already have experience with simpler versions of the technology in “smart tags” at toll booths and “speed passes” at gas stations. But this is just the beginning. RFID technology is on the brink of widespread applications in manufacturing, distribution, retail, healthcare, safety, security, law enforcement, intellectual property protection and many other areas, including mundane applications like keeping track of personal possessions. Some visionaries imagine, quote, “an internet of objects” – a world in which billions of objects will report their location, identity, and history over wireless connections.

... Other powerful new technologies are on the horizon, like sensor technology and nanotechnology. All the more reason to think about these issues broadly and to establish guiding principles serving the twin goals of fostering useful technologies while keeping them from overtaking our civil liberties. With RFID technology as with many other surveillance technologies, we need to consider how it will be used, and will it be effective. What information will it gather, and how long will that data be kept? Who will have access to those data banks, and under what checks-and-balances? Will the public have appropriate notice, opportunity to consent and due process in the case mistakes are made? How will the data be secured from theft, negligence and abuse, and how will accuracy be ensured? In what cases should law enforcement agencies be able to use this information, and what safeguards should apply? There should be a general presumption that Americans can know when their personal information is collected, and to see, check and correct any errors ...

Patrick Leahy of Burlington was elected to the United States Senate in 1974 and remains the only Democrat elected to this office from Vermont. He was also the youngest Senator (34) elected from the Green Mountain State and is now serving his fifth term. Contact Senator Leahy at senator_leahy@leahy.senate.gov

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Tuesday, May 11, 2004

HP RFID Technology: Hewlett-Packard expands its RFID footprint

From San Jose Business Journal, CA  ... Hewlett-Packard Co. is expanding its investment in RFID technology, the new way of better tracking inventories of merchandise. The ...

HP is rolling out its first RFID-ready products as part of a Wal-Mart trial, however HP is a leader in using and understanding RFID technology. The company uses RFID within its own supply chain, provides RFID services to customers, and is part of the global effort on RFID standards. HP Labs is taking RFID technology even further.
For HP Labs, RFID enables a Sentient Environment, which knows precisely what happens to objects in its vicinity. This environment is designed to ensure that goods are not only in a specific location, but in a specific condition. HP RFID researchers are combining the object-tracking abilities of RFID with sensors that capture video images, determine location or measure environmental factors like temperature or humidity into a powerful RFID infrastructure, called Sentient Environments.

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Tuesday, April 13, 2004

RFID EPC: Atmel Has Joined EPCglobal to Design Worldwide RFID...

From PRNewswire (press release)  ... Atmel Germany GmbH has joined the EPCglobal(TM) Hardware Action Group (HAG), which is developing the standard for the next-generation UHF RFID specification. ...

AtmelGermany GmbH has joined the EPCglobal(TM) Hardware Action Group (HAG), whichis developing the standard for the next-generation UHF RFID specification.Especially the supply chain management market will benefit from this standard,as it will drastically improve the tracking visibility of goods. Founded in October 2003, EPCglobal is a non-profit joint venture of thestandard organizations EAN International(TM) and the Uniform Code Council(UCC(TM)). The worldwide acting group, successor of AutoID/MIT, has more than180 members, including among others such as Wal-Mat(R), Unilever(R), Coca-Cola(R), the US Department of Defense (DOD), Benetton(R) and many majorRFID solution providers. The UHF RFID standard to be developed will include EPC code numbers storedin a tag. The standard specifies that code numbers will be sent via Internetto an ONS (Object Name Service) database that produces an address. The ONSthen can match the EPC to a server providing comprehensive information aboutthe object. This means for supply chain management systems that users will have permanently available, up-to-date tracking information of their goodsmoving through the retail supply chain. Atmel, a pioneer in the RFID area, provided the industry's first read-onlyRFID ICs in the late 1980's. Since 1995, Atmel has also been offering theworld's most flexible read/write RFID ICs. Today, Atmel is a key player forlow-frequency-based 125 kHz RFID ICs for access control systems. The portfolioalso includes ICs addressing the 13.56 MHz, UHF and Microwave frequency range.Atmel has outstanding expertise in UHF RFID link concepts, design knowledgeand ultra low power technology, and will bring this expertise to the EPCglobalgroup to achieve a worldwide accepted, interoperable EPC standard forultra-high frequency RFID technology.

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Wednesday, March 24, 2004

Leahy on RFID and Micro-Monitoring...

Remarks Of Senator Patrick Leahy
The Dawn of Micro Monitoring: It's Promise, And Its Challenges
To Privacy And Security
Conference On “Video Surveillance: Legal And Technological Challenges”
Georgetown University Law Center
Tuesday, March 23, 2004

First, I want to thank Georgetown University Law Center for hosting this conference. It’s always good to have an opportunity to return to my alma mater. I also thank the Center for American Progress, The Constitution Project and Wilmer, Cutler and Pickering for their roles in supporting this event. As a former prosecutor I am especially glad for the strong representation here from the law enforcement community. Chief Ramsey, good to see you again. And thanks to all the experts who have gathered here today to talk about these timely issues.

People Want To BE Safer

In our post-9/11 world, technology often has been our crucial but silent partner in helping us to ramp up our law enforcement and national security capabilities. We in this city are profoundly aware of the new risks we face. But we also need to do it right. The public does not want false assurances, nor do they want to be unduly alarmed. What the American people want is to actually be safer. And we still have a way to go in accomplishing that.

Tension Between Liberty And Security

In our constitutional system there is always tension between liberty and security – and never more so than since September 11th. One of the difficult challenges we face is to strike the right midpoint. Our constitutional checks and balances are intended to help us do that.

The video technologies you are discussing today offer tools that are better, faster and smarter, on scales of magnitude that are unprecedented. As an advocate of emerging technologies who also has a keen interest in them, I watch these breakthroughs with great interest.

I have sought to find ways to encourage the commercial sector to create new products and opportunities, and I have promoted use of new technologies by law enforcement agencies, while also protecting consumer privacy and constitutional freedoms. That was the balance I sought to strike in my work on CALEA and in other legislation that blends law enforcement’s needs, the needs of our robust technology sector, and the privacy interests of the American people. The hands-off approach to the Internet that I have favored is another example, and right now I am working with others to extend the Internet tax moratorium, to keep the Internet free from discriminatory and multiple state and local taxes.

On The Cusp Of A Micro-Monitoring Revolution

The marriage of information-gathering technology with information storing technology, manipulated in increasingly sophisticated databases, is beginning to produce the defining privacy challenge of the information age. Modern databases, networks and the Internet allow us to easily collect, store, distribute and combine video, audio and other digital trails of our daily transactions. We are on the verge of a revolution in micro-monitoring – the capability for the highly detailed, largely automatic, widespread surveillance of our daily lives.

RFIDs

And one of the most dramatic and dazzling new challenges we all will be facing soon is the emergence of a relatively new, surveillance-related technology called radio frequency identification -- R–F–I–D for short.

RFID tags are tiny computer chips that can be attached to physical items in order to provide identification and tracking by radio. Their potential invasiveness is obvious from their size, which, as shown in this picture, already is surprisingly small. And they will only get smaller.

In their basic function, RFID chips are like barcodes, which by now are ubiquitous in our stores and offices and crime labs and manufacturing plants.

Barcodes On Steroids

But RFID chips are like supercharged barcodes – barcodes on steroids, if you will. They are so small they can be tagged onto almost any object. They do not have to be in open view; RFID receivers just have to be within the vicinity – at a security checkpoint, in a doorway, inside a mailbox, atop a traffic light. And RFID chips can carry a lot more information than barcodes. Some versions are recordable so that they can carry along the object's entire history.

RFID chips are more powerful than today’s video surveillance technology. RFIDs are more reliable, they are 100 percent automatic, and they are likely to become more pervasive because they are significantly less expensive, and there are many business advantages to using them. RFIDs seem poised to become the catalyst that will launch the age of micro-monitoring.

I have followed RFID technology for some time and have welcomed its potential for many constructive uses. I have supported the use of RFIDs in a Vermont pilot program for tracking cattle to curtail outbreaks, like mad cow disease, and our Vermont program is now being emulated for a national tracking system. RFID technology may also help thwart prescription drug counterfeiting, a use the FDA encouraged in a recent report. Leading retailers like Wal-Mart and Target – as well as the Department of Defense -- are requiring its use by suppliers for inventory control. Fifty million pets around the world have embedded RFID chips. Of course, many of us already have experience with simpler versions of the technology in “smart tags” at toll booths and “speed passes” at gas stations.

But this is just the beginning. RFID technology is on the brink of widespread applications in manufacturing, distribution, retail, healthcare, safety, security, law enforcement, intellectual property protection and many other areas, including mundane applications like keeping track of personal possessions. Some visionaries imagine, quote, “an internet of objects” – a world in which billions of objects will report their location, identity, and history over wireless connections. Those days of long hunts around the house for lost keys and remote controls might be a frustration of the past.

These all raise exciting possibilities, but they also raise potentially troubling tangents. While it may be a good idea for a retailer to use RFID chips to manage its inventory, we would not want a retailer to put those tags on goods for sale without consumers’ knowledge, without knowing how to deactivate them, and without knowing what information will be collected and how it will be used. While we might want the Pentagon to be able to manage its supplies with RFID tags, we would not want an al Qaeda operative to find out about our resources by simply using a hidden RFID scanner in a war situation.

Drawing Lines

Of course these are just some of the foreseeable possibilities, and a lot depends on enhancements in the technology, reductions in costs, and developments in voluntary standard-setting, systems and infrastructure to manage RFID-collected information. But the RFID train is beginning to leave the station, and now is the right time to begin a national discussion about where, if at all, any lines will be drawn to protect privacy rights.

The need to draw some lines is already becoming clear. Recent reports revealed clandestine tests at a Wal-Mart store where RFID tags were inserted in packages of Max Factor lipsticks, with RFID scanners hidden on nearby shelves. The radio signals triggered nearby surveillance cameras to allow researchers 750 miles away to watch those consumers in action. A similar test occurred with Gillette razors at another Wal-Mart store.

These excesses suggest that Congress may need to step in at some point. When privacy intrusions reach the point of behavior that is absurdly out of bounds, we find ourselves having to deal with such issues as the “Video Voyeurism Prevention Act,” a bill now before Congress that would ban the use of camera to spy in bathrooms and up women’s skirts, a practice that by now has even been given a name, “upskirting,” which I’m sure is as new to you as it is to most of us in Congress.

Other powerful new technologies are on the horizon, like sensor technology and nanotechnology. All the more reason to think about these issues broadly and to establish guiding principles serving the twin goals of fostering useful technologies while keeping them from overtaking our civil liberties.

With RFID technology as with many other surveillance technologies, we need to consider how it will be used, and will it be effective. What information will it gather, and how long will that data be kept? Who will have access to those data banks, and under what checks-and-balances? Will the public have appropriate notice, opportunity to consent and due process in the case mistakes are made? How will the data be secured from theft, negligence and abuse, and how will accuracy be ensured? In what cases should law enforcement agencies be able to use this information, and what safeguards should apply? There should be a general presumption that Americans can know when their personal information is collected, and to see, check and correct any errors.

These are all questions we need to consider, and it is entirely possible that Congress may decide that enacting general parameters would be constructive. It is important that we let RFID technology reach its potential without unnecessary constraints. But it is equally important that we ensure protections against privacy invasions and other abuses. Technology may also help with the answers -- for example, “blockers” that deactivate RFID tags, and software that thwarts spyware.

Beginning A National Dialogue

There is no downside to a public dialogue about these issues, but there are many dangers in waiting too long to start. We need clear communication about the goals, plans and uses of the technology, so that we can think in advance about the best ways to encourage innovation, while conserving the public’s right to privacy.

We have seen this time and time again where a potentially good approach is hampered because of lack of communication with Congress, the public and lack of adequate consideration for privacy and civil liberties.

Take for example the so-called CAPPS II program. No doubt in a post-9/11 world, we should have an effective airline screening system. But the Administration quietly put this program together, collected passengers’ information without their knowledge and piloted this program without communicating with us and before privacy protections were in place. The result was a recent GAO analysis that showed pervasive problems in the screening program and admissions that we are now set back in our efforts to create an effective screening system.

As another example, the Administration recently funded the MATRIX program to provide law enforcement access to state government and commercial databases. This was potentially a useful crime-fighting tool. But there was insufficient information about the program and about potentially intrusive data mining capabilities, and there were unaddressed concerns about privacy protections. Now 11 out of 16 states participating in the program have pulled out – many, citing privacy concerns – thus hampering the effectiveness of the information sharing program. Again, had some of these issues been vetted in advance, we may have been able to enhance law enforcement intelligence.

Just recently, there were reports about the FBI’s new Strategic Medical Intelligence program, in which doctors have been enlisted to report to the FBI “any suspicious event,” such as an unusual rash or a lost finger. The goal of preventing bio-terrorism is important. But there are many unanswered questions about the program’s privacy protections and its ability to identify truly suspicious events and not unrelated personal medical situations. Hopefully, this program will not be hampered by lack of communication and oversight.

I have written oversight letters to the Justice Department and to the Department of Homeland Security on all of these issues and am waiting for their responses.

I want to make sure that mistakes like those are not repeated, especially with RFID technology, where there is so much potential value. That is why I asked to speak with you today, to begin the process of encouraging public dialogue in both the commercial and public sectors before the RFID genie is let fully out of its bottle.

This is a dialogue that should cut across the political spectrum, and it should include the possibility of constructive, bipartisan congressional hearings. The earlier we begin this discussion, the greater the prospects for success in reaching consensus on a set of guiding principles.

When several of us from both parties banded together years ago to found the Congressional Internet Caucus, we were united by our appreciation for what the Internet would do for our society. Years later, we remain united, we remain optimistic, and partisanship has never interfered in the Caucus’s work.

That is the spirit in which I hope a discussion can now begin on micro-monitoring.

Thank you for your interest in these cutting-edge issues, and thanks for this opportunity to share some ideas with you.

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