Monday, February 06, 2006

RFID Philips Electronics Phenom Project

Philips Electronics is investing in a long-term research project, called PHENOM. This project will create an identity-, location-, and intention-aware environment which can predict, sense, and respond to behavior. A prototype has been built and tested. The RFID-enabled system learns from users, devices and objects behavior and makes the interaction feel very natural. ...

... "The tracking and identification sub-system consists of a Smart Door and a Magic Table. Both the door and the table can identify objects, fitted with an RFID tag, as well as people carrying an RFID badge in their pocket. The tags and badges are battery-free and maintenance-free. The data generated by the tag readers is collected by servants (independent software agents), which transform it into useful information. " ...

RFID Philips Electronics Phenom Project: Via Philips Research Technologies: An overview of the PHENOM project ...

Additional resources on Philips Electronics' progress in the research of RFID applications ...

Ambient Experience in practice: Royal Philips Electronics: "In addition to a CT scanner, the Yacktman Children's CT Pavilion has three main elements: projection, dynamic LED lighting and RFID. Patients can choose from four themes, each geared for different tastes and age groups; aquatic, space, fly-through and a default lava lamp type ambience. RFID-encoded cards corresponding to the theme chosen by patients cause the lighting and wall/ceiling projection to change "

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,





Sunday, December 18, 2005

RFID Company Raises Capital ...

Impinj raises another round of investment funding from venture capitalists to sustain its growth in the RFID technology industry. ...

... "Impinj, Inc., the fabless semiconductor company whose patented Self-Adaptive Silicon technology enables its two business lines: semiconductor intellectual property and high performance radio frequency identification (RFID) products, announced it has secured a $26.5 million round of funding. Participants in the funding round included new investors GF Private Equity Group LLC, who led the round, and VentureTech Alliance along with existing investors ARCH Venture Partners, Madrona Venture Group, Mobius Venture Capital, Polaris Venture Partners, Unilever Technology Ventures, UPS Strategic Enterprise Fund and the Viterbi Group. This new injection of capital allows Impinj to maintain our excellent progress delivering the semiconductor solutions that our customers in the explosive RFID and the nascent embedded nonvolatile markets are demanding, said Dr. William Colleran, President and CEO of Impinj. We will continue to aggressively drive our product development and operations to maintain our leadership positions in those markets. " ...

RFID Company Raises Capital: Via Impinj: Impinj Raises $26.5M, Cements RFID Leadership Role ...

Impinj, Inc. is a fabless semiconductor company whose patented Self-Adaptive Silicon® technology enables its two synergistic business lines: high performance RFID products and cost-effective semiconductor intellectual property (SIP). A leading contributor to the RFID standards for high volume supply-chain applications worldwide, Impinj leverages its technical expertise and industry partnerships to deliver the GrandPrix™ solution, comprising tags, readers, software and systems integration to offer RFID that just works™. Impinj’s innovative SIP products, core to the company’s RFID tags, are licensed to leading semiconductor companies worldwide, allowing them to cost-effectively integrate crucial nonvolatile memory (NVM) alongside analog and digital functionality on a single chip. Impinj's SIP products include the popular AEON™ memory, the world's first rewriteable NVM technology compatible with logic CMOS manufacturing, and AEFuse™, the world's first rewriteable fuse architecture.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,





Sunday, August 21, 2005

Managing RFID Data Volume

Managing RFID Data Volume: Via Intelligent Enterprise Magazine: Tapping the RFID Data Flood

Rajeev Kasturi summarizes insights from Mark Palmer, Progress Software on management of RFID data volumes ...

... "The most cited example has been the estimate that Wal-Mart's in-store implementation will generate about 7.5 terabytes of RFID data a day. Certainly we haven't seen this scale of implementation yet, but the example speaks to the possibility that the volume of information could be overwhelming in larger operations. Therefore, it's important to have new data management approaches. " ...

Labels: , , , ,





Tuesday, August 09, 2005

Cephalon RFID Pilot: Drug Tracking ...

Cephalon RFID Pilot: Drug Tracking: Cephalon Selects OAT Foundation Suite for Item-Level Drug Tracking Pilot: OAT Foundation Suite Powers RFID Initiative to Drive Supply Chain Efficiencies and Ensure Patient Safety ...

Cephalon pilots RFID drug tracking as products move through the value chain to market. Broader RFID drug tracking implementation is expected, upon conclusion of the pilot period ...

... "OATSystems®, Inc., the recognized RFID framework leader, announced that Cephalon, Inc, an international biopharmaceutical company, has selected OAT Foundation Suite as the RFID software platform for use in a pilot program for tracking branded pharmaceuticals across the supply chain. For the pilot, OAT Foundation Suite will deliver end-to-end visibility of Cephalon’s products as they move across owned and outsourced facilities as well as selected drug wholesaler trading partners. Once the pilot project has proven successful, Cephalon will implement RFID utilizing the OAT Foundation Suite. " ...


OATSystems, Inc. is the recognized RFID framework leader with software that empowers businesses to achieve competitive advantage from radio-frequency identification (RFID). As pioneers in the development of RFID technology, OAT has been setting the standard in RFID for over half a decade and is responsible for industry firsts that include the largest scale and largest scope of deployments, as well as the most innovative approaches to providing enterprise-wide RFID solutions.

Additional resources on RFID pilots for drug tracking:

Purdue Pharma announced that it is placing RFID tags on bottles of the pain reliever OxyContin (oxycodone) to make it easier to authenticate, as well as to track and trace the medication. OxyContin, which is a controlled substance, has been subject to abuse, theft, and diversion. Based on the availability of sufficient RFID tags, Purdue also plans to tag bottles of Palladone (hydromorphone), a newly approved product to treat persistent moderate-to-severe pain.

Nine months after an FDA task force promoted the use of radio frequency identification (RFID) on drug packaging and labeling to prevent fake products from entering the supply chain, agency officials on November 15 announced that at least four pharmaceutical makers are participating in pilot projects or studies to test the effectiveness of RFID in combating counterfeiting.

GlaxoSmithKline [NYSE: GSK) announced that it will begin using radio frequency identification (RFID) tags in the next 12 to 18 months on at least one product deemed susceptible to counterfeiting in order to more effectively monitor its progress from the company to the patient. GSK is partnering in this pilot project with the US Food and Drug Administration, which is encouraging the use of RFID technology to protect American patients from the growing risk of counterfeit and diverted medicines.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,





Saturday, June 18, 2005

Entry Level RFID Solutions

Entry Level RFID Solutions: LOFTWARE’S TWO, NEWLY CONFIGURED & AGGRESSIVELY PRICED LABEL PRINTING SOLUTIONS FEATURE INDUSTRY-FIRST ALL-IN-ONE SOLUTION FOR RAPIDLY EVOLVING RFID AND BARCODE MIXED ENVIRONMENTS: Company also announces it has major RFID pilot programs in progress worldwide ...

Loftware offers turnkey entry-level RFID solutions ...

... "The new entry-level solution is available immediately and is a perfect compliment for companies whose requirements for barcode printing and marking RFID label tags is limited. The new entry-level solution, called RFID Starter, is a two seat, RFID and/or barcode printing capable software solution that allows Tier-2 and Tier-3 companies facing limited RFID compliance demands meet their current mixed compliance requirements for barcode label and RFID printing software for a base price of $1995. " ...


Loftware with its headquarters in York, Maine pioneered the very first barcode label design and barcode printing software application for PC’s over two decades ago. Since that time the company has led the development efforts to provide best in class enterprise marking and identification software solutions including RFID technology to Fortune 100 and 500 companies supply chain operations across the globe. Loftware’s products now extend supply chain efficiencies beyond just bar-coding by supporting and complying with the latest EPC (Electronic Product Code) standards and specifications for programming and managing RFID Smart Labels and Tags. Industries including automotive, aerospace, electronic, medical, transportation are managing their supply chains everyday using Loftware’s latest technologies.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,





Wednesday, February 23, 2005

HighValue Innovative RFID Solutions to Industry Challenges Recognized ...

HighValue Innovative RFID Solutions to Industry Challenges Recognized: Progress OpenEdge Partners Recognized for Impressive Growth and ... QAD is recognized for their strengths in collaborative partnerships to develop solutions that leverage RFID technology and service oriented archutectures. ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... QAD has consistently demonstrated the true power of collaboration by working with Progress to address the latest industry challenges, such as RFID and SOA. ...

... The OpenEdge Division, an operating unit of Progress Software Corporation (Nasdaq: PRGS) and a leading supplier of technology for building business applications, announced today that Discovery Travel Systems (DTS), Epicor, Infor Global Solutions (Infor), Integrated Warehousing Solutions, NextStage Analytics (NSA), Publishing Business Systems (PBS), QAD, and Skyward Systems won partnership awards at Progress' North American Application Partner (AP) Kick-off event in Phoenix, Arizona last month. Partners were recognized for their innovative use of Progress(R) OpenEdge(TM) technology, their focus on high-value initiatives, and joint efforts to deliver higher business value to their customers through collaborative applications that have allowed them to achieve impressive growth. ... ... Partner Collaboration Award - QAD - A leading provider of enterprise applications for global manufacturers, QAD has consistently demonstrated the true power of collaboration by working with Progress to address the latest industry challenges, such as RFID and SOA. By pairing OpenEdge technology with in-depth manufacturing knowledge, QAD helps its global customers achieve competitive advantage and improved operations. QAD solutions help streamline the manufacturing enterprise, improve quality and customer service, shorten product time-to-market, and increase supply chain responsiveness across geographies, languages and currencies. ...


The Progress OpenEdge Division is an operating unit of Progress Software Corporation (Nasdaq: PRGS), a $300+ million global software industry leader. The Progress OpenEdge Division simplifies the development, deployment, integration, and management of the world's best business applications. The Progress OpenEdge Division and its 2,000 Application Partners offer more than 5,000 OpenEdge-based business applications that precisely fit customer needs and deliver competitive advantage. Customers purchase more than $5 billion annually in OpenEdge-based software and services from Progress Software Corporation and its partners. The Progress(R) OpenEdge(TM) platform enables its partners to rapidly build and deliver lowest cost-of-ownership applications. Progress Software Corporation also conducts business through its other operating units: Sonic Software, DataDirect Technologies, and ObjectStore.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,





Tuesday, February 22, 2005

RFID Government Technology Event ...

RFID Government Technology Event: Federal Technology Purchasing Projected to Increase 35%; FOSE 2005 ...

Emerging government technology event scheduled for April will include RFID technology and unique identification programs in progress at the DOD ...

From PR Newswire (press release) ... Carroll, Program Executive Office, Enterprise Information Systems, (PEO EIS) remarked, "US Army imperatives such as Unique Identification and RFID have made ...

... Seven weeks before the April 5th opening day of FOSE 2005, government's technology-fest, registration for the event is on tap for its 29th annual gathering of government, military and homeland security professionals to test drive new technology. Market intelligence firm INPUT projects that federal technology system purchases of hardware and associated software are slated to reach $23 billion by 2009, a 35% increase from 2004. FOSE 2005, taking place on April 5-7 at the Washington DC Convention Center, is the hub for the government technology community with exhibits from more than 500 companies, industry keynotes, and whirlwind special events. ...


FOSE 2005 will take place at the Washington DC Convention Center on Tuesday-Thursday, April 5-7, 2005.

Labels: , , , , , , ,





Friday, December 31, 2004

RFID Deployment ...

RFID Deployment: RFID Interest High, Deployment Levels Increasing According to ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... into effect next month for suppliers to Wal-Mart and the US Department of Defense (DoD), interest in and progress toward deployment of RFID (Radio Frequency ...

... With mandates going into effect next month for suppliers to Wal-Mart and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), interest in and progress toward deployment of RFID (Radio Frequency IDentification) is relatively high, according to a survey completed this month by Larstan Business Reports. About three-quarters of the 669 supply chain and information technology executives responding to the exclusive Larstan survey believe that having an effective advanced infrastructure in place to support RFID mandates, such as those from Wal-Mart and DoD, is "very important" or "important." ...


Additional RFID deployment resources ...

RFID Deployment: RFID Deployment Step 1: Analysis In what areas are you considering using RFID? For ... forecasting. RFID Deployment Step 2: Planning. ...

Full-Scale RFID Could Take a Decade: But full-fledged RFID deployment—across outbound shipments, inbound deliveries and manufacturing for a whole product lineup—could easily take not just one ...

Deploy RFID - the RFID Deployment Center - Home: The RFID Deployment Center is an infrastructure for designing, testing, validating, and deploying RFID supply chain systems, software, and individual ...

RFID deployment center aids fulfillment: Distribution Center Logistics, and grocery carrier Transport Industries have established a radio frequency identification (RFID) deployment center to help ...

GeometricSCM Chosen to Run Dallas RFID Deployment: GeometricSCM Chosen to Run Dallas RFID Deployment Center Solution Supports Third-party Logistics Warehousing SIS Technologies, DC ...

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,





Monday, December 06, 2004

RFID Accelerator: ObjectStore Trading Accelerator Delivers Real-Time Event ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... ObjectStore(R) products are supporting RFID implementations, and are deployed in industries such as finance, telecommunications and travel, where companies ...

... ObjectStore, a leader in products for real-time data services, and an operating company of Progress Software Corporation (Nasdaq: PRGS), today announced a major update to ObjectStore(R) Trading Accelerator(TM), which provides financial trading houses with real-time market data capture, query and management, integrated with historical market data. With its newly available Event Query Language (EQL), ObjectStore Trading Accelerator allows trading houses to apply sophisticated "what-if" scenarios and analytics on incoming data sources and execute such real-time trading strategies as volume weighted average pricing (VWAP) analysis and program trading. ...

Labels: , , , ,





Wednesday, October 13, 2004

RFID Technology Company: C-Chip Reports its Year End Results: Key Milestones Achieved

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... We integrate wireless communications, on-line transactions, software applications, RFID technology, the Internet and, when location is required, GPS technology ...

C-Chip's performance is positive progress for an emergin RFID technology company, that is making the transition from product development to growth orientation through sales and marketing ...

... C-Chip Technologies Corporation (OTCBB:CCHI) (FRANKFURT:CCHI) is pleased to report its results for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2004. After extensive product development and significant capital invested in R&D, and an acquisition of a security services business in February, we reported our first commercial sales totaling slightly over $1 million for the year. For the 12-month period ended June 30, 2004, net loss per share was $0.14 compared to $0.02 in 2003. As of June 30, 2004, our working capital stood at over $1.5 million, which compared to a working capital deficit of almost $820,000 in the prior year. ...

RFID Technology Company grows up

C-Chip Technologies Corporation is positioned in an emerging and rapidly growing industry that is about interconnecting machines with IT infrastructures and mobile assets. We integrate wireless communications, on-line transactions, software applications, RFID technology, the Internet and, when location is required, GPS technology to enable business users to efficiently access, control and manage remote assets at low costs. The Company's goal is to be recognized as a leading provider of credit management solutions for financial institutions, of security solutions for insurance companies and asset management solutions for car rental companies and urban fleets.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,





Monday, September 20, 2004

RFID Solution: ObjectStore RFID Accelerator Chosen by German Forestry Company For ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... Software Corporation (Nasdaq: PRGS), today announced that DABAC, a leading German software development company, has selected ObjectStore(R) RFID Accelerator(TM ...

... ObjectStore, a leader in products for real-time data services, and an operating company of Progress Software Corporation (Nasdaq: PRGS), today announced that DABAC, a leading German software development company, has selected ObjectStore(R) RFID Accelerator(TM), an easy-to-use, real-time data management solution, for its Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) pilot program. German forestry company Cambium-Forstbetriebe will use DABAC's ObjectStore RFID Accelerator-based technology to track trees from Germany's independent forestries through the supply chain and to the saw mills. The new system is being developed to improve inventory management and streamline the financial reconciliation process. (In a separate announcement today ObjectStore unveiled its ObjectStore RFID Accelerator. ...




ObjectStore is a global provider of real-time data management products. Its products enable corporate data caching and complex event processing, and its leading object database is renowned for performance and scalability. ObjectStore(R) products are supporting RFID implementations, and are deployed in industries such as finance, telecommunications and travel, where companies rely on them to complement their corporate data management infrastructure. ObjectStore is an operating company of Progress Software Corporation (Nasdaq: PRGS), a $300+ million global software industry leader.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,





Monday, June 21, 2004

RFID Services: R4 Global Addresses Progress in RFID Technology Adoption at Bear ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... Jeff Richards, president and CEO of R4 Global Services(TM) (www.r4gs.com), a leading solutions provider of RFID-enabled technology and services, addressed the ...

R4 is a professional services partner to businesses seeking to gain real-time visibility, control and automation through the effective evaluation, implementation, integration and support of RFID and RFID-related technologies. R4 engagement teams utilize the proprietary R4 EnableSM and R4 EvaluateSM methodologies to help clients work through the myriad of issues, challenges and benefits associated with RFID and RFID-related technologies. R4 client solutions are built around best-of-breed products (chips, tags, readers, software and other related products), the R4 EnableSM methodology and, most importantly, the specific needs of our clients. Each industry, and specific application within an industry, has its own set of requirements and challenges with respect to RFID-related initiatives. Each also has unique sets of improvements and efficiencies to be gained, and understanding ROI is typically at the forefront of each initiative.

Lean manufacturing has significantly improved efficiency across the manufacturing economy. RFID enables the "next level" of efficiency, driving further improvements across the manufacturing value chain from raw material supplier, through production and distribution. By improving and automating data collection processes at each point in the process, manufacturers can gain improved visibility into key processes and achieve automation of key labor-intensive functions that historically have required human involvement due to the need for barcode data collection.

Labels: , , , , , , ,





Monday, June 14, 2004

RFID Technology: Progress Software Corporation Focuses on Service-Oriented ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA  ... A panel discussion on Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), moderated by InformationWeek magazine's Senior Editor Rick Whiting, will focus on how mid-market ...

Progress Software Corporation, its companies, and their research and business development center, provide and actively pursue innovative technologies and new business opportunities that enable businesses worldwide to make an effective transition to true e-business environments. Progress with its OpenEdge Business Platform and more than 2,000 global Application Partners provide business applications that precisely fit customer needs and deliver real competitive advantage. ObjectStore's real-time event engine aims to support RFID in three ways: by providing real-time in-memory database (REID), through EPC code support, and RFID Savant Interfaces. ObjectStore's Real Time Event Engine is a high-performance application solution for the real-time capture, organization and simultaneous query of streaming event data. The Event Engine combines extreme scalability with a flexible "Cache-Forward"™ architecture to support real-time analysis on streaming event data in distributed environments, without impacting capture or query speeds.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,





Wednesday, May 26, 2004

RFID Software: Progress Expands Partner Programs to Enhance Revenue Growth with ...

From Business Wire (press release), CA ... With new business opportunities such as Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), Service Oriented Business Applications (SOBA) and SOA, it can be challenging for ...

Labels: , ,





Monday, March 29, 2004

Mobile RFID Asset Solutions: TrenStar and Matrics Announce Strategic Partnership to Deliver Standard Solutions to Select Industries

CLEVELAND – NA 2004 – March 29 – TrenStar Inc. and Matrics Inc. are partnering to deliver the first standard, UHF Radio Frequency Identification-enabled (RFID-enabled) mobile asset solutions to select industries.

TrenStar’s “pay-per-use” mobile asset management business model that combines RFID and asset tracking technologies with outsourced logistics services will now feature Matrics’ UHF Passive RFID technology in food, chemical and other selected industries where large numbers of assets are moving rapidly through global supply chains. Mobile assets are broadly used in many industries to transport raw materials, work-in-progress and finished goods.

The combined solution includes RFID tags, handheld and vehicle-mounted readers, and antennae arrays designed specifically to support the unique business processes of the targeted industries. David Adams, TrenStar corporate strategy senior vice president, said that clients can expect improved efficiency of mobile asset management, reduced losses of both assets and contents and reduced operating costs.

“We’ve created an industry standard solution for managing mobile assets,” said Adams. “Our joint solution combines the right mobile assets with the right RFID infrastructure with the right technology layer for specific industries, therefore we offer them dramatically improved supply chain performance.”

“Passive UHF RFID technology is reliable and economical, and it meets the demanding requirements of industries like chemical and food,” said Girish Rishi, Matrics senior vice president, marketing. “Now, TrenStar and Matrics are offering RFID capability with world-class mobile asset technology. Our joint customers will be delighted with the operational efficiencies they will gain from our industry-focused solutions.”

The partnership expands upon a prior relationship between Matrics and TrenStar’s Global Container Management L.L.C. (GCM) unit. GCM has delivered a complete mobile asset management solution – containers, services and technology – to Kraft Foods.

About TrenStar: TrenStar’s supply chain technology and services heritage has evolved into a pioneering RFID-enabled, “pay-per-use” model of mobile asset management designed to reduce transportation and operating costs for companies invested in containers that move raw materials, work-in-progress and finished goods through the supply chain. TrenStar’s three-part asset management, logistics services and supply chain technology solution, integrating RFID and container tracking software, is offered to qualified clients for no up front cost. This solution is intended to benefit multiple companies in an asset-intensive industry participating in TrenStar’s distinctive asset pooling operations.

TrenStar and its affiliates focus on the brewing, food & beverage, chemical, air cargo, automotive, healthcare, retail and other asset-intensive industries. Scottish Courage Breweries, Carlsberg UK , Kraft, Goodyear, Burberry, and Prada Stores use TrenStar’s products and services. Clients of TrenStar’s affiliates include Ford, Toyota, ExxonMobil, DaimlerChrysler and Dow Chemical. Headquartered in Denver, Colorado and recognized as one of the top Denver-area software developers, TrenStar has offices in the United Kingdom, Australia and South Africa. TrenStar is privately held, and investors include the venture arm of The Carlyle Group.

About Matrics: Matrics is a global leader in the design and manufacture of EPC -compliant RFID systems. Matrics along with its partnership network provides RFID solutions to many of the Fortune 1000 companies, government, as well as international businesses. Current customers include International Paper and McCarran Airport . For more information, visit Matrics on the web at www.matrics.com

More RFID News...

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,





Container RFID Standard: TrenStar and OTD Announce Partnership to Deliver First Standard...

From Business Wire (press release) ... are partnering to deliver the first standard, Radio Frequency Identification-ready (RFID-ready) reusable containers as part of TrenStar's complete mobile asset ...

About TrenStar: TrenStar's supply chain technology and services heritage has evolved into a pioneering RFID-enabled, "pay-per-use" model of mobile asset management designed to reduce transportation and operating costs for companies invested in containers that move raw materials, work-in-progress and finished goods through the supply chain. TrenStar's three-part asset management, logistics services and supply chain technology solution, integrating RFID and container tracking software, is offered to qualified clients for no up front cost. This solution is intended to benefit multiple companies in an asset-intensive industry participating in TrenStar's distinctive asset pooling operations.

TrenStar and its affiliates focus on the brewing, food & beverage, chemical, air cargo, automotive, healthcare, retail and other asset-intensive industries. Scottish Courage Breweries, Carlsberg UK, Kraft, Goodyear, Burberry, and Prada Stores use TrenStar's products and services. Clients of TrenStar's affiliates include Ford, Toyota, ExxonMobil, DaimlerChrysler and Dow Chemical. Headquartered in Denver, Colorado and recognized as one of the top Denver-area software developers, TrenStar has offices in the United Kingdom, Australia and South Africa. TrenStar is privately held, and investors include the venture arm of The Carlyle Group. On the Net: www.trenstar.com.

About O-T-D: O-T-D Corp. manufactures and services custom-built aluminum containers, pallets and other handling equipment recognized in the industry as best in class. O-T-D has evolved from a niche manufacturer serving the synthetic rubber industry to a service provider for food, pharmaceutical, automotive and nuclear power companies as well as designers and developers of automatic storage and retrieval systems. O-T-D specializes in special orders and offers financing and leasing programs to qualified customers. Customers include Goodyear, ExxonMobil, Bridgestone Firestone, Bayer, American Synthetic Rubber Company, DSM, Crompton, Michelin, ISP, Industrias Negromex, Honda of America, Merck, Dow, Novartis and Eli Lilly. O-T-D is headquartered in Mishawaka, Indiana. On the Net: www.otdcorp.com.

More RFID News...

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,





Thursday, March 25, 2004

ObjectCache 2.0 introduces real-time data synchronisation functionality

Johannesburg 25 March 2004 a division of which provides products and services that enable organisations to manage data in real-time has released which includes integration with corporate databases through its new data source synchronisation DSS capability. MD of Progress Software South Africa says ObjectCache non-invasively extends corporate databases to improve the scalability and performance of the systems that depend on them and allows companies to add new services based on access to their existing customer data at the same time.
IT Web Software News, Mar 25, 2004

Labels:





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.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,