| |

History of RFID tags
An RFID tag used for electronic toll
collection.
In 1946 Léon Theremin
invented an espionage tool for the Soviet Union which
retransmitted incident radio waves with audio information. Sound waves vibrated
a diaphragm
which slightly altered the shape of the resonator, which modulated the
reflected radio frequency. Even though this device was a passive covert listening
device, not an identification tag, it has been attributed as a predecessor
to RFID technology. The technology used in RFID has been around since the early
1920s according to one source (although the same source states that RFID
systems have been around just since the late 1960s).
Similar technology, such as the IFF transponder invented by the
United Kingdom in 1939,
was routinely used by the allies in World War II to identify
aircraft as friend or foe. Transponders are still used by military and
commercial aircraft to this day.
Another early work exploring RFID is the landmark 1948 paper by Harry
Stockman, titled "Communication by Means of Reflected Power" (Proceedings of the
IRE, pp 1196–1204, October 1948). Stockman predicted that "…considerable
research and development work has to be done before the remaining basic problems
in reflected-power communication are solved, and before the field of useful
applications is explored."
Mario Cardullo's U.S. Patent 3,713,148 in 1973 was the first true ancestor of modern
RFID; a passive radio transponder with memory. The initial device was passive,
powered by the interrogating signal, and was demonstrated in 1971 to the New
York Port Authority and other potential users and consisted of a transponder
with 16 bit memory for use as a toll device. The basic Cardullo patent covers
the use of RF, sound and light as transmission media. The original business plan
presented to investors in 1969 showed uses in transportation (automotive vehicle
identification, automatic toll system, electronic license plate, electronic
manifest, vehicle routing, vehicle performance monitoring), banking (electronic
check book, electronic credit card), security (personnel identification,
automatic gates, surveillance) and medical (identification, patient
history).
A very early demonstration of reflected power (modulated backscatter) RFID
tags, both passive and semi-passive, was done by Steven Depp, Alfred Koelle and
Robert Freyman at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory in 1973. The
portable system operated at 915 MHz and used 12 bit tags. This technique is
used by the majority of today's UHF and microwave RFID tags.
The first patent to be associated with the abbreviation RFID was granted to
Charles Walton in 1983 U.S. Patent 4,384,288.

RFID tags
RFID tags come in three general varieties:- passive, active, or
semi-passive (also known as battery-assisted). Passive tags
require no internal power source, thus being pure passive devices (they are only
active when a reader is nearby to power them), whereas semi-passive and active
tags require a power source, usually a small battery.

RFID backscatter.
To communicate, tags respond to queries generating signals that must not
create interference with the readers, as arriving signals can be very weak and
must be differentiated. Besides backscattering, load
modulation techniques can be used to manipulate the reader's field.
Typically, backscatter is used in the far field, whereas load
modulation applies in the nearfield, within a few
wavelengths from the reader.

Passive
Passive RFID tags have no internal power supply. The minute electrical
current induced in the antenna by the incoming radio frequency signal provides
just enough power for the CMOS integrated circuit in
the tag to power up and transmit a response. Most passive tags signal by
backscattering the carrier wave from the reader.
This means that the antenna has to be designed both to
collect power from the incoming signal and also to transmit the outbound
backscatter signal. The response of a passive RFID tag is not necessarily just
an ID number; the tag chip can contain non-volatile, possibly
writable EEPROM
for storing data.
Passive tags have practical read distances ranging from about 10 cm (4 in.)
(ISO 14443) up to a few meters
(Electronic Product
Code (EPC) and ISO 18000-6),
depending on the chosen radio frequency and antenna design/size. Due to their
simplicity in design they are also suitable for manufacture with a printing
process for the antennas. The lack of an onboard power supply means that the
device can be quite small: commercially available products exist that can be
embedded in a sticker, or under the skin in the case of low frequency RFID
tags.
In 2007, the Danish Company RFIDsec developed a passive RFID with privacy
enhancing technologies built-in including built-in firewall access controls,
communication encryption and a silent mode ensuring that the consumer at point
of sales can get exclusive control of the key to control the RFID. The RFID will
not respond unless the consumer authorizes it, the consumer can validate
presence of a specific RFID without leaking identifiers and therefore the
consumer can make use of the RFID without being trackable or otherwise leak
information that represents a threat to consumer privacy.
In 2006, Hitachi, Ltd. developed
a passive device called the µ-Chip measuring 0.15×0.15 mm (not including the
antenna), and thinner than a sheet of paper (7.5 micrometers).
Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) technology is used to achieve this level of
integration. The Hitachi µ-Chip can wirelessly transmit a 128-bit unique ID
number which is hard coded into the chip as part of the manufacturing process.
The unique ID in the chip cannot be altered, providing a high level of
authenticity to the chip and ultimately to the items the chip may be permanently
attached or embedded into. The Hitachi µ-Chip has a typical maximum read range
of 30 cm (1 foot). In February 2007 Hitachi unveiled an even smaller RFID device
measuring 0.05×0.05 mm, and thin enough to be embedded in a sheet of paper.
The new chips can store as much data as the older µ-chips, and the data contained
on them can be extracted from as far away as a few hundred metres.
The ongoing problems with all RFIDs is that they need an external antenna which is
80 times bigger than the chip in the best version thus far developed.
Further, the present costs of manufacturing the inlays for tags has inhibited broader adoption.
As silicon prices are reduced and new more economic methods for manufacturing inlays and
tags are perfected in the industry, broader adoption and item level tagging
along with economies of scale production scenarios; it is expected to make RFID
both innocuous and commonplace much like Barcodes are presently.
Alien Technology's
Fluidic Self Assembly and HiSam machines, Smartcode's Flexible Area Synchronized
Transfer (FAST) and Symbol Technologies'
PICA process are alleged to potentially further reduce tag costs by massively
parallel production[citation
needed]. Alien Technology and
SmartCode are currently using the processes to manufacture tags while Symbol
Technologies'PICA process is still in the development phase.
Symbol was acquired by Motorola in 2006. Motorola however has since made agreements
with Avery Dennison for supply of tags, meaning their own Tag production and PICA
process may have been abandoned. Alternative methods of production such as FAST,
FSA, HiSam and possibly PICA could potentially reduce tag costs dramatically,
and due to volume capacities achievable, in turn be able to also drive the
economies of scale models for various Silicon fabricators as well.
Some passive RFID vendors believe that Industry benchmarks for tag costs can be
achieved eventually as new low cost volume production systems are implemented more broadly.
Non-silicon tags made from polymer semiconductors are currently being
developed by several companies globally. Simple laboratory printed polymer tags
operating at 13.56 MHz were demonstrated in 2005 by
both PolyIC (Germany) and Philips (The Netherlands). If
successfully commercialized, polymer tags will be roll-printable, like a
magazine, and much less expensive than silicon-based tags. The end game for most
item-level tagging over the next few decades may be that RFID tags will be
wholly printed – the same way a barcode is today – and be virtually free, like a
barcode. However, substantial technical and economic hurdles must be surmounted
to accomplish such an end: hundreds of billions of dollars have been invested
over the last three decades in silicon processing, resulting in a per-feature
cost which is actually less than that of conventional printing.

Active
Unlike passive RFID tags, active RFID tags have their own internal power
source, which is used to power the integrated circuits
and to broadcast the response signal to the reader. Communications from active
tags to readers is typically much more reliable (i.e. fewer errors) than from
passive tags due to the ability for active tags to conduct a "session"
with a reader.
Active tags, due to their on board power supply, also may transmit at higher
power levels than passive tags, allowing them to be more robust in "RF
challenged" environment with humidity and spray or with dampening targets
(including humans/cattle, which contain mostly water), reflective targets from
metal (shipping containers, vehicles), or at longer distances: Generating strong
responses from weak reception is a sound approach to success. In turn, active
tags are generally bigger, caused by battery volume, and more expensive to
manufacture, caused by battery price. However, their potential shelf life is
comparable, as self discharge of batteries competes with corrosion of aluminated
printed circuits.
Many active tags today have operational ranges of hundreds of meters, and a
battery life of up to 10 years. Active tags may include larger memories than
passive tags, and may include the ability to store additional information
received from the reader.
Special active RFID tags may include temperature sensors. Temperature logging
is used to monitor the temperature profile during transportation and storage of
perishable goods as fresh produce or certain pharmaceutical products. Other
sensor types are combined with active RFID tags, including humidity,
shock/vibration, light, radiation, temperature, pressure and concentrations of
gases like ethylene.
The United States Department of Defense (DoD) has successfully used active
tags to reduce search and loss in logistics and improve supply chain visibility
for more than 15 years (concept of in-transit-visibility ITV).

Semi-passive
Semi-passive tags, also called semi-active tags, are similar to active tags
in that they have their own power source, but the battery only powers the
microchip and does not power the broadcasting of a signal. The response is
usually powered by means of backscattering the RF
energy from the reader , where energy is reflected back to the reader as with
passive tags. An additional application for the battery is to power data
storage.
If energy from the reader is collected and stored to emit a response in the
future, the tag is operating active
Whereas in passive tags the power level to power up the circuitry must be 100
times stronger than with active or semi-active tags, also the time consumption
for collecting the energy is omitted and the response comes with shorter latency
time. The battery-assisted reception circuitry of semi-passive tags leads
to greater sensitivity than passive tags, typically 100 times more. The enhanced
sensitivity can be leveraged as increased range (by one magnitude) and/or as
enhanced read reliability (by reducing bit error rate at least one
magnitude).
The enhanced sensitivity of semi-passive tags place higher demands on the
reader concerning separation in more dense population of tags. Because an
already weak signal is backscattered to the reader from a larger number of tags
and from longer distances, the separation requires more sophisticated
anti-collision concepts, better signal processing and some more intelligent
assessment which tag might be where. For passive tags, the reader-to-tag link
usually fails first. For semi-passive tags, the reverse (tag-to-reader) link
usually collides first.
Semi-passive tags have three main advantages 1) Greater sensitivity than
passive tags 2) Longer battery powered life cycle than active tags. 3) Can
perform active functions (such as temperature logging) under its own power, even
when no reader is present for powering the circuitry.

Extended capability
Extended capability RFID defines a category of RFID that goes beyond the
basic capabilities of standard RFID as merely a “license plate” or bar-code
replacement technology. Key attributes of extended capability RFID include, but
are not limited to, the ability to read at longer distances and around
challenging environments, to store large amounts of data on the tag, to
integrate with sensors, and to communicate with external devices.
Examples of extended capability RFID tag technologies include EPC C1G2 with
extended memory (e.g. 64Kb), battery-assisted passive, and active RFID.
Battery-assisted passive, also known as semi-passive or semi-active, has the
ability to extend the read range of standard passive technologies to well over
50 meters, to read around challenging materials such as metal, to withstand
outdoor environments, to store an on-tag database, to be able to capture sensor
data, and to act as a communications mechanism for external devices. Also,
battery-assisted passive only transmits a signal when interrogated, thus
extending battery life. Active RFID, which can have some of the features of
battery-assisted passive, is commonly used for even longer distances and
real-time locationing. It also actively transmits a signal, which often results
in shorter battery life.
Common applications of extended capability RFID include Yard Management,
Parts Maintenance and Repair Operations, Cold-Chain Management, Reusable
Transport Items tracking, High Value/High Security Asset tracking, and other
applications where extended capabilities are needed.

Antenna types
The antenna used for an RFID tag is affected by the intended application and
the frequency of operation. Low-frequency (LF) passive tags are normally inductively
coupled, and because the voltage induced is proportional to frequency, many coil turns
are needed to produce enough voltage to operate an integrated circuit. Compact
LF tags, like glass-encapsulated tags used in animal and human identification,
use a multilayer coil (3 layers of 100–150 turns each) wrapped around a ferrite core.
At 13.56 MHz (High frequency or HF), a
planar spiral with 5–7 turns over a credit-card-sized form factor can be used to
provide ranges of tens of centimeters. These coils are less costly to produce
than LF coils, since they can be made using lithographic techniques
rather than by wire winding, but two metal layers and an insulator layer are
needed to allow for the crossover connection from the outermost layer to the
inside of the spiral where the integrated circuit and resonance capacitor are
located.
Ultra-high
frequency (UHF) and microwave passive tags are
usually radiatively-coupled to the reader antenna and can employ conventional
dipole-like antennas. Only one metal layer is required, reducing cost of
manufacturing. Dipole antennas, however, are a poor match to the high and
slightly capacitive input impedance of a typical integrated circuit. Folded
dipoles, or short loops acting as inductive matching structures, are often
employed to improve power delivery to the IC. Half-wave dipoles (16 cm at
900 MHz) are too big for many applications; for example, tags embedded in
labels must be less than 100 mm (4 inches) in extent. To reduce the length of
the antenna, antennas can be bent or meandered, and capacitive tip-loading or
bowtie-like broadband structures are also used. Compact antennas usually have
gain less than that of a dipole — that is, less than 2 dBi — and can be regarded
as isotropic in the plane
perpendicular to their axis.
Dipoles couple to radiation polarized along their axes, so the visibility of
a tag with a simple dipole-like antenna is orientation-dependent. Tags with two
orthogonal or nearly-orthogonal antennas, often known as dual-dipole tags, are
much less dependent on orientation and polarization of the reader antenna, but
are larger and more expensive than single-dipole tags.
Patch antennas are used to provide service in close proximity to metal
surfaces, but a structure with good bandwidth is 3–6 mm thick, and the need to
provide a ground layer and ground connection increases cost relative to simpler
single-layer structures.
HF and UHF tag antennas are usually fabricated from copper or aluminum.
Conductive inks have seen some use in tag antennas but have encountered problems
with IC adhesion and environmental stability.

Tag attachment
There are three different kinds of RFID tags based on their attachment with
identified objects, i.e. attachable, implantable and
insertion tags. In addition
to these conventional RFID tags, Eastman Kodak Company has filed two patent
applications for monitoring ingestion of medicine based on a digestible
RFID tag.

Tagging positions
RFID tagging positions can influence the performance of air interface UHF
RFID passive tags and related to the position where RFID tags are embedded,
attached, injected or digested.
In many cases, optimum power from RFID reader is not required to operate
passive tags. However, in cases where the Effective Radiated Power (ERP) level
and distance between reader and tags are fixed, such as in manufacturing
setting, it is important to know the location in a tagged object where a passive
tag can operate optimally.
R-Spot or Resonance Spot, L-Spot or Live Spot and
D-Spot or Dead Spot are defined to specify the location of RFID
tags in a tagged object, where the tags can still receive power from a reader
within specified ERP level and distance.

Tag environments
The proposed ubiquity of RFID tags means that readers may need to select
which tags to read among many potential candidates, or may wish to probe
surrounding devices to perform inventory checks or, in case the tags are
associated to sensors and capable of keeping their values, question them for
environmental conditions. If a reader intends to work with a collection of tags,
it needs to either discover all devices within an area to iterate over them
afterwards, or use collision avoidance
protocols.

Finding tags in a search environment.
To read tag data, readers use a tree-walking singulation algorithm,
resolving possible collisions and processing responses one by one. Blocker tags
may be used to prevent readers from accessing tags within an area without killing
surrounding tags by means of suicide commands. These tags masquerade as valid
tags but have some special properties: in particular, they may possess any
identification code, and may deterministically respond to all reader queries,
thus rendering them useless and securing the environment.
Besides this, tags may be promiscuous, attending all requests alike,
or secure, which requires authentication and control of typical password
management and secure key distribution issues. A tag may as well be prepared to
be activated or deactivated in response to specific reader commands.
Readers that are in charge of the tags of an area may operate in
autonomous mode (as opposed to interactive mode). When in this
mode, a reader periodically locates all tags in its operating range, and keeps a
presence list with a persist
time and some control information. When an entry expires, it is removed from
the list.
Frequently, a distributed application requires both types of tags: passive
tags are incapable of continuous monitoring and perform tasks on demand when
accessed by readers. They are useful when activities are regular and well
defined, and requirements for data storage and security are limited; when
accesses are frequent, continuous or unpredictable, there are time constraints
to meet or data processing (internal searches, for instance) to perform, active
tags may be preferred.

Current uses
RFID is becoming increasingly prevalent as the price of the technology
decreases. In January 2003
Gillette
announced in that it ordered 500 million tags from Alien Technology.
Gillette VP Dick Cantwell says the company paid "well under ten cents"
for each tag.

Passports
RFID tags are being used in passports issued by many
countries. The first RFID passports ("E-passport") were
issued by Malaysia in 1998. In addition
to information also contained on the visual data page of the passport, Malaysian
e-passports record the travel history (time, date, and place) of entries and
exits from the country.
Standards for RFID passports are determined by the International
Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), and are contained in ICAO
Document 9303, Part 1, Volumes 1 and 2 (6th edition, 2006). ICAO refers to the
ISO 14443 RFID chips in
e-passports as "contactless integrated circuits". ICAO standards provide for
e-passports to be identifiable by a standard e-passport logo on the front
cover.
In 2006, RFID tags were included in new US passports. The US produced 10
million passports in 2005, and it has been estimated that 13 million will be
produced in 2006. The chips will store the same information that is printed
within the passport and will also include a digital picture of the owner.
The US State Department initially stated the chips could only be read
from a distance of 10 cm (4 in), but after widespread criticism and a clear
demonstration that special equipment can read the test passports from 10 meters
(33 feet) away, the passports were designed to incorporate a thin metal lining to
make it more difficult for unauthorized readers to "skim" information
when the passport is closed. The department will also implement Basic Access
Control (BAC), which functions as a Personal Identification Number (PIN) in
the form of characters printed on the passport data page. Before a passport's
tag can be read, this PIN must be entered into an RFID reader. The BAC also
enables the encryption of any communication between the chip and interrogator.
Despite this precaution, the Center for Democracy and Technology
has issued warnings that significant security weaknesses that could be used
to track U.S. travelers are apparent in the specifications of the card design
as outlined by the U.S. Department of State.
Other nations introducing RFID-chipped passports include Ireland (2006),
Japan (March 1, 2006), Pakistan, Norway (November 2005), Malaysia
(early 2000), New Zealand (November 4, 2005), Belgium, The Netherlands (2005),
Germany, and The United Kingdom. Many European Union countries are also planning
to add fingerprints and other biometric data, while some have already done
so.
Security expert Bruce Schneier has
suggested that a mugger operating near an airport could target victims who have
arrived from wealthy countries, or a terrorist could design an improvised
explosive device which functioned when approached by persons from a
particular country.

Transportation payments

RFID in a form of a sticker with bar code on
the opposite side. 
An Electronic Road
Pricing gantry in Singapore. Gantries such as these collect tolls in
high-traffic areas from active RFID units in vehicles.
PayPass RFID chip
removed from a MasterCard.
- Throughout Europe, and in particular in Paris (system started in 1995 by
the RATP), Lyon,
Bordeaux and Marseille in France, Porto and Lisbon in Portugal, Milan, Turin,
and Florence in Italy, and Brussels in Belgium, RFID passes conforming to the
Calypso (RFID)
international standard are used for public transport systems. They are also
used now in Canada (Montreal), Mexico, Israel, Bogotá and Pereira in Colombia,
Stavanger in Norway, etc.
- T-money
cards can be used to pay for public transit in Seoul and surrounding cities.
Some other South Korean cities have adopted the system, which can also be used
in some stores as cash. T-money replaced Upass, first introduced for
transport payments in 1996 using MIFARE technology.
- JR East in Japan introduced SUICa (Super Urban Intelligent
Card) for transport payment service in its railway transportation service in
November 2001, using Sony's FeliCa (Felicity Card)
technology. The same Sony technology was used in Hong Kong's Octopus
card, and Singapore's EZ-Link card.
- In Hong
Kong, mass transit is paid for almost exclusively through the use of an
RFID technology, called the Octopus Card. Originally
it was launched in September 1997 exclusively for transit fare collection, but
has grown to be similar to a cash card, and can still be used in vending machines,
fast-food restaurants and supermarkets. The card can
be recharged with cash at add-value machines or in shops, and can be read
several centimetres from the reader. The same applies for Delhi
Metro, the rapid transit system in New Delhi, capital city of India.
- In Singapore, public transportation buses and trains employ passive RFID
cards known as EZ-Link cards. Traffic into
crowded downtown areas is regulated by variable tolls imposed using an active
tagging system combined with the use of stored-value cards (known as CashCards).
- RFID is used in Malaysia Expressways payment system. The name for the
system is Touch 'n Go. Due to the name and design, one must touch the card for
usage.
- The Washington, D.C. Metrorail
became the first U.S. urban mass-transit system to use RFID technology when it
introduced the SmarTrip card in 1999.
- In Turkey,
RFID has been used in the motorways and bridges as a payment system over ten
years. Also the new electronic bus tickets in Istanbul
- The Chicago Transit
Authority has offered the hicago Card and the Chicago
Card Plus for rail payments across the entire system since 2002 and for
bus payments since 2005.
- The New York City
Subway is conducting a trial during 2006, utilizing PayPass by MasterCard
as fare payment.
- The Massachusetts
Bay Transportation Authority introduced the use of a CharlieCard RFID as a fare
payment system which is cheaper than its paper or cash equivalent.
- Six transit agencies in the King County region of Washington State are
collaborating to introduce the Smart Card, or Orca Card.
- The Moscow Metro, the world's
second busiest, was the first system in Europe to introduce RFID
smartcards in 1998.
- In the UK, op systems for prepaying for
unlimited public transport have
been devised, making use of RFID technology. The design is embedded in a
creditcard-like pass, that when scanned reveals details of whether the pass is
valid, and for how long the pass will remain valid. The first company to
implement this is the NCT company
of Nottingham City, where the
general public affectionately refer to them as "beep cards". It has since then
been implemented with great success in London, where "Oyster cards" allow for
pay-as-you-go travel as well as passes valid for various lengths of time and
in various areas.
- In Oslo, Norway, the
upcoming public transport payment is to be entirely RFID-based. The system is
to be put into production around spring 2007
- In Norway,
all public toll roads are equipped with an RFID payment system known as AutoPass.
- Since 2002, in Taipei, Taiwan the transportation
system uses RFID operated cards as fare collection. The Easy
Card is charged at local convenience stores and metro stations, and can be
used in Metro, buses and parking lots. The uses are planned to extend all
throughout the island of Taiwan in the future.
- RFID tags are used for electronic toll
collection at toll booths with Georgia's
Cruise Card, California's FasTrak, Colorado's E-470,
Illinois' I-Pass, Oklahoma's Pikepass, the
expanding eastern states' E-ZPass system (including
Massachusetts's Fast Lane,Delaware, New Hampshire
Turnpike, Maryland, New Jersey Turnpike, West Virginia
Turnpike, New York's Thruway system, Virginia, and the Maine Turnpike),
Florida's SunPass, Various systems in
Texas including D/FW's NTTA TollTag, the Austin metro TxTag and Houston
HCTRA EZ Tag (which as of early 2007
are all valid on any Texas toll road), Kansas's K-Tag,
The "Cross-Israel Highway"
(Highway 6), Philippines South Luzon
Expressway E-Pass, Brisbane's Queensland
Motorway E-Toll System in Australia, Autopista del Sol
(Sun's Highway), Autopista Central (Central Highway), Autopista Los
Libertadores, Costanera Norte, Vespucio Norte Express and Vespucio Sur urban
Highways and every forthcoming urban highway (in a "Free Flow" modality)
concessioned to private investors in Chile, all toll tunnels in Hong Kong
(Autotoll)
and all highways in Portugal (Via Verde,
the first system in the world to span the entire network of tolls), France (Liber-T
system), Italy
(Telepass),
Spain (VIA-T),
Brazil (Sem
Parar - Via Fácil). The tags, which are usually the active type, are read
remotely as vehicles pass through the booths, and tag information is used to
debit the toll from a prepaid account. The system helps to
speed traffic through toll plazas as it records the date, time, and billing
data for the RFID vehicle tag. The plaza- and queue-free 407 Express Toll
Route, in the Greater Toronto
Area, allows the use of a transponder (an active tag) for all billing.
This eliminates the need to identify a vehicle by licence plate.[citation
needed]
- The Transperth public transport
network in Perth, Western
Australia uses RFID technology in the new SmartRider ticketing
system.
- In Atlanta, MARTA
(Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority) has transitioned its bus and
rail lines from coin tokens to the new Breeze Card system which
uses RFID tags embedded in disposable paper tickets. More permanent plastic
cards are available for frequent users.
- In Rio de Janeiro,
"RioCard" passes can be used in buses, ferries, trains and subway. There are
two types, one you cannot recharge, the other one can be recharged if it's
been bought by the company you work for, if they provided it (only in Brazil).
- A number of ski resorts, particularly
in the French Alps and in the
Spanish and French Pyrenees, have adopted RFID tags to provide skiers
hands-free access to ski lifts. Skiers don't have
to take their passes out of their pockets.
- In Santiago (Chile) the
subway system Metro and the recently implemented public transportation system
Transantiago uses an RFID
card called Bip or Multivia.
- In Medellín (Colombia) the
system Metro and the recently implemented card system uses an RFID card called
Cívica.
- In Colombia, "Federación
Nacional de Cafeteros" uses an RFID solution to trace the coffee.
- In Dubai,
(United Arab Emirates) drivers through Sheikh Zayed Road and Garhoud Bridge
pay toll tax using RFID tags called Salik (Road
Toll).
- In Milano (Italy), the ATM
"Azienda Trasporti Milanese" has implemented RFID tags for frequent users.
- In Barcelona, its used to
identify users in a bike sharing
system called Bicing to prevent bicycle theft and detect the
periode of bicycle usage.
- In Mumbai,
the busiest suburban rail transport in the world, which transports 3.5 million
commuters per day, has also implemented the use of RFID ticket cards for the
use in automatic ticket vending machines for hassle free and no need to stand
in long queues.[citation
needed]
- In the Netherlands the new OV-chipkaart system will
eventually replace current bus, tram, metro and train payment systems,
allowing for both more accurate fares, access control to (train)stations and
more accurate determination of government fees to the various public
transportation companies.[citation
needed]

Product tracking
- The Canadian Cattle Identification
Agency began using RFID tags as a replacement for barcode tags. The tags
are required to identify a bovine's herd of origin and this is used for
tracing when a packing plant condemns a carcass. Currently CCIA tags are used
in Wisconsin and by US farmers on a voluntary basis. The USDA is currently
developing its own program.

RFID tags used in libraries: square book tag, round CD/DVD
tag and rectangular VHS tag.
- High-frequency RFID tags are used in library book or bookstore
tracking, jewelry tracking, pallet tracking,
building access control, airline
baggage tracking, and apparel and pharmaceutical
items tracking. High-frequency tags are widely used in identification badges,
replacing earlier magnetic stripe cards.
These badges need only be held within a certain distance of the reader to
authenticate the holder. The American Express Blue
credit card now includes a high-frequency RFID tag. In Feb 2008, Emirates
airline started a trial of RFID baggage tracing at London and Dubai airports.
- BGN has launched two fully automated Smartstores that combine
item-level RFID tagging and SOA to deliver an integrated supply chain, from
warehouse to consumer.
- UHF RFID tags are
commonly used commercially in case, pallet, and shipping container tracking,
and truck and
trailer tracking in shipping yards.
- In May 2007, Bear River Supply began utilizing UHF RFID tags to
help monitor their agricultural equipment.

Lap scoring
Passive and active RFID systems are used in off road events such as Enduro
and Hare and Hounds racing, the riders have a transponder on their person,
normally on their arm. When they complete a lap they swipe or touch the receiver
which is connected to a computer and log their lap time. The Casimo
Group Ltd make a system which does this.

Animal identification
- Implantable RFID tags or transponders can be used for animal
identification. The transponders are more well-known as passive RFID
technology, or simply "Chips" on animals.

Inventory systems
An advanced automatic identification technology such as the Auto-ID system
based on the Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology has significant
value for inventory systems. Notably, the technology provides an accurate
knowledge of the current inventory. In an academic study performed
at Wal-Mart, RFID reduced Out-of-Stocks by 30 percent for products selling
between 0.1 and 15 units a day. Other benefits of using RFID include the
reduction of labor costs, the simplification of business processes, and the
reduction of inventory inaccuracies.
In 2004, Boeing integrated the use of RFID technology to help reduce
maintenance and inventory costs on the Boeing 787
Dreamliner. With the high costs of aircraft parts, RFID technology allowed
Boeing to keep track of inventory despite the unique sizes, shapes and
environmental concerns. During the first six months after integration, the
company was able to save $29,000 in just labor.

RFID mandates
Wal-Mart
and the United
States Department of Defense have published requirements that their vendors
place RFID tags on all shipments to improve supply chain
management. Due to the size of these two organizations, their RFID mandates
impact thousands of companies worldwide. The deadlines have been extended
several times because many vendors face significant difficulties implementing
RFID systems. In practice, the successful read rates currently run only 80%, due
to radio wave attenuation caused by the
products and packaging. In time it is expected that even small companies will be
able to place RFID tags on their outbound shipments.
Since January, 2005, Wal-Mart has required its top 100 suppliers to apply
RFID labels to all shipments. To meet this requirement, vendors use RFID
printer/encoders to label cases and pallets that require EPC tags for
Wal-Mart. These smart labels are produced by embedding RFID inlays
inside the label material, and then printing bar code and other visible
information on the surface of the label.
Another Wal-Mart division, Sam's Club, has also moved
in this direction. It sent letters dated Jan. 7, 2008, to all of its suppliers,
stating that by Jan. 31, 2008, every full single-item pallet shipped to its
distribution center in DeSoto, Texas, or directly to one of its stores served by
that DC, must bear an EPC Gen 2 RFID tag. Suppliers failing to comply will be
charged a service fee.

Promotion tracking
Manufacturers of products sold through retailers promote their products by
offering discounts for a limited period on products sold to retailers with the
expectation that the retailers will pass on the savings to their customers.
However, retailers typically engage in forward buying, purchasing more
product during the discount period than they intend to sell during the promotion
period. Some retailers engage in a form of arbitrage, reselling
discounted product to other retailers, a practice known as diverting. To
combat this practice, manufacturers are exploring the use of RFID tags on
promoted merchandise so that they can track exactly which product has sold
through the supply chain at fully discounted prices.

Human implants

Hand with the planned location of the RFID
chip.
Just after the operation to insert the RFID tag was
completed.
Implantable RFID chips designed for animal tagging are now being used in
humans. An early experiment with RFID implants was conducted by British
professor of cybernetics Kevin
Warwick, who implanted a chip in his arm in 1998. Night clubs in Barcelona,
Spain and in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, use an
implantable chip to identify their VIP customers, who in turn use it to pay for
drinks.
In 2004, the Mexican Attorney General's office implanted 18 of its staff
members with the Verichip to control access to a
secure data room. (This number has been variously mis-reported as 160 or 180
staff members.)
Security experts have warned against using RFID for authenticating people due
to the risk of identity theft. For
instance a man-in-the-middle
attack would make it possible for an attacker to steal the identity of a
person in real-time. Due to the resource-constraints of RFIDs it is virtually
impossible to protect against such attack models as this would require complex
distance-binding protocols.

Libraries
Among the many uses of RFID technologies is its deployment in libraries.
This technology has slowly begun to replace the traditional barcodes on library items
(books, CDs, DVDs, etc.). However, the RFID tag
can contain identifying information, such as a book’s title or material type,
without having to be pointed to a separate database (but this is rare in
North America). The information is read by an RFID reader, which replaces the
standard barcode reader commonly
found at a library’s circulation desk. The RFID tag found on library materials
typically measures 50 mm X 50 mm in North America and 50 mm x 75 mm in Europe,
and can also act as a security device, taking the
place of the more traditional electromagnetic
security strip.
While there is some debate as to when and where RFID in libraries first
began, it was first proposed in the late 1990s as a technology that would
enhance workflow in the library setting. Rockefeller
University in New York may have been the
first academic library in the United States to utilize
this technology, whereas Farmington Community Library may have been the first
public institution, both of which began using RFID in 1999. Worldwide, the
United States utilizes RFID in libraries more than any other nation, followed by
the United Kingdom and Japan. It is estimated
that over 30 million library items worldwide now contain RFID tags, including
some in the Vatican Library in Rome.
RFID has many applications in libraries that can be highly beneficial,
particularly for circulation staff. Since RFID tags can be read through an item,
there is no need to open a book cover or DVD case to scan an item. This would
help alleviate injuries such as repetitive strain
injury that can occur over many years. Since RFID tags can also be read
while an item is in motion, using RFID readers to check-in returned items while
on a conveyor belt reduces
staff time. Furthermore, inventories could be done on a whole shelf of materials
within seconds, without a book ever having to be taken off the shelf. In Umeå,
Sweden, it is being
used to assist visually impaired people in borrowing audiobooks. In
Malaysia, Smart Shelves are used to pinpoint the exact location of books in
Multimedia University Library, Cyberjaya.
However, this technology remains cost prohibitive for many smaller libraries,
and the conversion time has been estimated at 11 months for an average size
library. With RFID taking a large burden off staff, it has also been shown to
produce a threat to staff that their job duties have been replaced by
technology, but
the threat is not realized in North America where recent surveys have not
returned a single library that cut staff because of adding RFID. In fact,
library budgets are being reduced for personnel and increased for
infrastructure, making it necessary for libraries to add automation to
compensate for the reduced staff size.
A concern surrounding RFID in libraries that has received considerable
publicity is the issue of privacy. Because RFID tags can in theory be scanned
and read from over 350 feet in distance, and because RFID utilizes an assortment
of frequencies, there is a
legitimate concern over whether sensitive information could be collected from an
unwilling source. However, advocates of RFID’s use in libraries will point out
that library RFID tags do not contain any patron information, and that
the tags used in the majority of libraries use a frequency only readable from
approximately ten feet.
There is much yet to be written and discussed on the issue of privacy and RFID,
but it is clear that vendors need to be aware of this issue and develop improved
technologies for secure RFID transactions.

Schools and universities
School authorities in the Japanese city of Osaka are now chipping children's
clothing, back packs, and student IDs in a primary school. A
school in Doncaster, England is piloting a monitoring
system designed to keep tabs on pupils by tracking radio chips in their
uniforms.

Museums
RFID technologies are now also implemented in end-user applications in
museums. An example is the custom-designed application eXsport at the
Exploratorium, a science museum in San Francisco. When the visitor enters the
museum he receives an RF Tag that can be carried on a card or necklace. The
eXspot system enables the visitor to receive information about the exhibit and
take photos they can collect later at the giftshop. Later on they can visit
their personal Web page on which specific information such as visit dates, the
visited exhibits and the taken photographs can be viewed.

Social retailing
When you walk into a dressing room, the mirror reflects your image, but you
also see images of the apparel item and celebrities wearing it on an interactive
display. A webcam also projects an image of the consumer wearing the item on the
website for everyone to see. This creates an interaction between the consumers
inside the store and their social network outside the store. The technology
behind this system is an RFID interrogator antenna in the dressing room and
Electronic Product Code RFID tags on the apparel item.

Miscellaneous
- In November 2007, French company [Violet]http://www.violet.net/index_us.html/ starts selling its
RFID-enabled Nabaztag with children's
books (from publisher Gallimard Jeunesse)
that included RFID tags inside the front cover. When the book is passed in
front of the Nabaztag, it downloads the
audio book on the Internet and reads the book out loud.
- Some hospitals use Active RFID tags to perform Asset Tracking
in Real Time.
- In 2006, the
Smart Conveyer Tunnel, designed by Blue Vector, was
introduced. This allowed the pharmaceutical industry
to track both UHF and HF tags. Rite Aid
utilized the technology with some of McKesson's products.
- The NEXUS
and SENTRI frequent traveler
programs use RFID to speed up landborder processing between the U.S. and
Canada and Mexico.
- NADRA has developed an
RFID-based driver license that
bears the license holders personal information and stores data regarding
traffic violations, tickets issued, and outstanding penalties. The license
cards are designed so that driving rights can be revoked electronically in
case of serious violations.
- Sensors
such as seismic sensors may be read
using RFID transceivers, greatly simplifying remote data collection.
- In August 2004, the Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction (ODRC) approved a $415,000 contract to evaluate
the personnel tracking technology of Alanco
Technologies. Inmates will wear wristwatch-sized transmitters
that can detect attempted removal and alert prison computers. This project
is not the first rollout of tracking chips in US prisons. Facilities in
Michigan, California and Illinois already employ the technology.
- Transponder timing at mass sports events.
- Used as storage for a video game system produced
by Mattel, "HyperScan".
- RFIQin, designed by Vita Craft, is
an automatic cooking device that has three different sized pans,
a portable induction heater, and recipe cards.
Each pan is embedded with an RFID tag that monitors the food
16 times per second while an MI tag in the handle of the pans transmits
signals to the induction heater to
adjust the temperature.
- Slippery Rock
University is using RFID tags in their students' ID cards beginning in the
fall 2007 semester.
- 25 real world application case studies can be found in a 61 page free
Ebook RFID Technology Applications
- RFID tags are now being embedded into playing cards that are used for
televisied poker tournamnets, so commentators know exactly what cards has been
dealt to whom, as soon as the deal is complete.
- The Iraqi army uses an RFID security card that contains a biometric
picture of the soldier. The picture in the chip must match the picture on the
card to prevent forgery.
- Theme parks (such as Alton
Towers in the United Kingdom) have been known to use RFID to help them
identify users of a ride in order to make a DVD of their time at the park.
This is then available for the user to buy at the end of the day. This is
voluntary by the user by wearing a wristband given to them at the park.
- Access control - many
places which employ traditional swipe cards for access control are slowly
shifting towards RFID contactless based solutions in their cards.
- Meetings and conventions have also implemented RFID technology into
attendee badges allowing the ability to track people at conferences. This
provides data that can display what rooms people have enter and exited during
the day. This data is available to show organizers to help them improve the
content and design of the conference. RFID is also being used to improve the
lead retrieval process
for exhibitors at exhibitions.
- RFID transponder chips have been implanted in golf balls for
the purposes of ball tracking. The uses of such tracking range
from being able to search for a lost ball using a homing device,
to a computerized driving range format that tracks shots made by
a player and gives feedback on distance and accuracy.
- In 2007 artist couple artcoon starts their world project Kansa.
Sirpa Masalins human like wooden sculptures carry an RFID inside. Hans-Ulrich
Goller-Masalin created a New Media Art work which traces the individual
sculptures of Kansa in the internet. Owners are asked to register the city
where their sculpture is located. By comparing the RFIDs unique number
referenced at artcoon the owner can identify his sculpture as the original
one.
- Some casinos are embedding RFID tags into their chips. This allows the
casinos to track the locations of chips on the casino floor, identify
counterfeit chips, and prevent theft. In addition, casinos can use RFID
systems to study the betting behavior of players.

Potential uses

Replacing barcodes
RFID tags are often a replacement for UPC or EAN barcodes,
having a number of important advantages over the older barcode technology. They
may not ever completely replace barcodes, due in part to their higher cost and
in other part to the advantage of more than one independent data source on the
same object. The new EPC, along with
several other schemes, is widely available at reasonable cost.
The storage of data associated with tracking items will require many
terabytes on all levels.
Filtering and categorizing RFID data is needed in order to create useful
information. It is likely that goods will be tracked preferably by the pallet
using RFID tags, and at package level with Universal Product Code (UPC) or EAN from unique
barcodes.
The unique identity in any case is a mandatory requirement for RFID tags,
despite special choice of the numbering scheme. RFID tag data capacity is big
enough that any tag will have a unique code, while current bar codes are limited
to a single type code for all instances of a particular product. The uniqueness
of RFID tags means that a product may be individually tracked as it moves from
location to location, finally ending up in the consumer's hands. This may help
companies to combat theft and other forms of product loss. Moreover, the tracing
back of products is an important feature that gets well supported with RFID tags
containing not just a unique identity of the tag but also the serial number of
the object. This may help companies to cope with quality deficiencies and
resulting recall campaigns, but also contributes to concern over post-sale
tracking and profiling of consumers.
It has also been proposed to use RFID for POS store checkout to
replace the cashier with an automatic system
which needs no barcode scanning. However, this is not likely to be possible
without a significant reduction in the cost of current tags and changes in the
operational process around POS. There is some research taking place, however,
this is some years from reaching fruition.
An FDA nominated task force came to the conclusion after studying the various
technologies currently commercially available, which could meet the pedigree
requirements. Amongst all technologies studied including bar coding, RFID seemed
to be the most promising and the committee felt that the pedigree requirement
could be met by easily leveraging something that is readily available. (More
details see RFID-FDA-Regulations)

Telemetry
Active RFID tags also have the potential to function as low-cost remote
sensors that broadcast telemetry back to a base
station. Applications of tagometry[citation
needed] data could include sensing of road conditions by
implanted beacons, weather reports, and noise level monitoring. CAZ
It is possible that active or semi-passive RFID tags used with or in place of
barcodes could broadcast a signal to an in-store receiver to determine whether
the RFID tag (product) is in the store.

Identification of patients and hospital
staff
In July
2004, the Food and Drug
Administration issued a ruling that essentially begins a final review
process that will determine whether hospitals can use RFID systems to identify
patients and/or permit relevant hospital staff to access medical records. Since
then, a number of U.S. hospitals have begun implanting patients with RFID tags
and using RFID systems, more generally, for workflow and inventory
management. There is
some evidence, as well, that nurses and other hospital staff may be subjected to
increased surveillance of their activities or to labor intensification as a
result of the implementation of RFID systems in hospitals. The use of
RFID to prevent mixups between sperm and ova in IVF
clinics is also being considered.
In October 2004, the FDA approved USA's first RFID chips that can be
implanted in humans. The 134 kHz RFID chips, from VeriChip Corp., a
subsidiary of Digital
Angel, Inc., can incorporate personal medical information and could save
lives and limit injuries from errors in medical treatments, according to the
company. The FDA approval was disclosed during a conference call with investors.
Shortly after the approval, authors and anti-RFID activists Katherine Albrecht
and Liz
McIntyre discovered a warning letter from the FDA that spelled out serious
health risks associated with the VeriChip. According to the
FDA, these include "adverse tissue reaction",
"migration of the implanted transponder",
"failure of implanted transponder", "electrical hazards" and
"magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] incompatibility."
In 2007 John Wiley &
Sons published a guide to RFID use in the book RFID Applied (ISBN
978-0-471-79365-6)
== Possible uses for medical field == Human tagging and tracking can be a
great asset for use in hospitals, more importantly emergency rooms. One reason
being a nurse or doctor can easily access patient history or concerning files,
allergies, or any other complications from the incoming patient.

Yoking
It has been proposed to use a strong cryptography
based scheme to generate forensic evidence that two RFID tags were in proximity
at the time of scanning.

Regulation and standardization
There is no global public body that governs the frequencies used for RFID. In
principle, every country can set its own rules for this. The main bodies
governing frequency allocation for RFID are:
- USA: FCC (Federal
Communications Commission)
- Canada: CRTC (Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission)
- Europe: ERO, CEPT,
ETSI, and national
administrations (note that the national administrations must ratify the usage
of a specific frequency before it can be used in that country)
- Japan: MIC (Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications)
- China: Ministry of Information Industry
- Taiwan: NCC (National Communications Commission)
- South Africa: ICASA
- South Korea: Ministry
of Commerce, Industry and Energy
- Australia: Australian
Communications and Media Authority.
- New Zealand: Ministry
of Economic Development
- Singapore: Infocomm
Development Authority of Singapore
- Brazil: Anatel (Agência
Nacional de Telecomunicações)
Low-frequency (LF: 125 – 134.2 kHz and 140 – 148.5 kHz) and
high-frequency (HF: 13.56 MHz) RFID tags can be used globally without a
license. Ultra-high-frequency (UHF: 868 – 928 MHz) cannot be used globally
as there is no single global standard. In North America, UHF can be used
unlicensed for 902 – 928 MHz (±13 MHz from the 915 MHz center
frequency), but restrictions exist for transmission power. In Europe, RFID and
other low-power radio applications are regulated by ETSI recommendations EN 300
220 and EN 302 208, and ERO recommendation 70 03, allowing RFID operation with
somewhat complex band restrictions from 865–868 MHz. Readers are required
to monitor a channel before transmitting ("Listen Before Talk"); this
requirement has led to some restrictions on performance, the resolution of which
is a subject of current research. The North American UHF standard is not
accepted in France as it interferes with its military bands. For China and
Japan, there is no regulation for the use of UHF. Each application for UHF in
these countries needs a site license, which needs to be applied for at the local
authorities, and can be revoked. For Australia and New Zealand, 918 –
926 MHz are unlicensed, but restrictions exist for transmission power.
These frequencies are known as the ISM bands (Industrial
Scientific and Medical bands). The return signal of the tag may still cause
interference for other radio users.
Some standards that have been made regarding RFID technology include:
- ISO
14223/1 – Radio frequency identification of Animals, advanced transponders
– Air interface
- ISO 14443: This standard is
a very popular HF (13.56 MHz) standard, which is being used as the basis
of RFID-enabled passports under ICAO 9303.
- ISO
15693: This is also a very popular HF (13.56 MHz) standard, widely
used for non-contact smart payment and credit cards.
- ISO/IEC 18000:
Information technology — Radio frequency identification for item management:
- Part 1: Reference architecture and definition of parameters to be
standardized
- Part 2: Parameters for air interface communications below 135 kHz
- Part 3: Parameters for air interface communications at 13,56 MHz
- Part 4: Parameters for air interface communications at 2,45 GHz
- Part 6: Parameters for air interface communications at 860 MHz to 960
MHz
- Part 7: Parameters for active air interface communications at 433 MHz
- ISO
18185: This is the industry standard for electronic seals or "e-seals" for
tracking cargo containers using the 433 MHz and 2.4 GHz frequencies.
- EPCglobal – this is the
standardization framework that is most likely to undergo International
Standardisation according to ISO rules as with all sound standards in the
world, unless residing with limited scope, as customs regulations, air-traffic
regulations and others. Currently the big distributors and governmental
customers are pushing EPC heavily as a standard well accepted in their
community, but not yet regarded as for salvation to the rest of the world.

EPC Gen2
EPC Gen2 is short for EPCglobal UHF Class 1 Generation 2.
EPCglobal (a joint venture
between GS1 and GS1 US) is working
on international standards for the use of mostly passive RFID and the EPC in the
identification of many items in the supply chain for companies
worldwide.
One of the missions of EPCglobal was to simplify the Babel of protocols
prevalent in the RFID world in the 1990s. Two tag air interfaces (the protocol
for exchanging information between a tag and a reader) were defined (but not
ratified) by EPCglobal prior to 2003. These protocols, commonly known as Class 0
and Class 1, saw significant commercial implementation in 2002–2005.
In 2004 the Hardware Action Group created a new protocol, the Class 1
Generation 2 interface, which addressed a number of problems that had been
experienced with Class 0 and Class 1 tags. The EPC Gen2 standard was approved in
December 2004, and is
likely to form the backbone of passive RFID tag standards moving forward. This
was approved after a contention from Intermec that the standard may
infringe a number of their RFID related patents. It was decided that the
standard itself did not infringe their patents, but it may be necessary to pay
royalties to Intermec if the tag were to be
read in a particular manner. The EPC Gen2 standard was adopted with minor
modifications as ISO 18000-6C in 2006.
The lowest cost of Gen2 EPC inlay is offered by SmartCode
at a price of 5 cents
apiece in volumes of 100 million or more.
Nevertheless, further conversion (including additional label stock or
encapsulation processing/insertion and freight costs to a given facility or DC)
and of the inlays into usable RFID labels and the design of current Gen 2
protocol standard will increase the total end-cost, especially with the added
security feature extensions for RFID Supply Chain item-level tagging.

Problems and concerns

Global standardization
The frequencies used for RFID in the USA are currently incompatible with
those of Europe or Japan. Furthermore, no emerging standard has yet become as
universal as the barcode.

Security concerns
A primary security concern surrounding technology is the illicit tracking of
RFID tags. Tags which are world-readable pose a risk to both personal location
privacy and corporate/military security. Such concerns have been raised with
respect to the United
States Department of Defense's recent adoption of RFID tags for supply chain
management. More
generally, privacy organizations have expressed concerns in the context of
ongoing efforts to embed electronic product code (EPC) RFID tags in consumer
products.
EPCglobal Network, by design, is also susceptible to DoS attacks. Using
similar mechanism with DNS in resolving EPC data requests, the ONS Root servers
become vulnerable to DoS attacks. Any organisation planning to embark on
EPCglobal Network may cringe upon finding out that the EPCglobal Network
infrastructure inherits security weaknesses similar to DNS'.
A second class of defense uses cryptography to prevent tag cloning. Some tags
use a form of "rolling code" scheme,
wherein the tag identifier information changes after each scan, thus reducing
the usefulness of observed responses. More sophisticated devices engage in
Challenge-response authentications where the tag interacts with the reader.
In these protocols,
secret tag information is never sent over the insecure communication channel
between tag and reader. Rather, the reader issues a challenge to the tag, which
responds with a result computed using a cryptographic circuit keyed with some
secret value. Such protocols may be based on symmetric or
public key
cryptography. Cryptographically-enabled tags typically have dramatically
higher cost and power requirements than simpler equivalents, and as a result,
deployment of these tags is much more limited. This cost/power limitation has
led some manufacturers to implement cryptographic tags using substantially
weakened, or proprietary encryption schemes, which do not necessarily resist
sophisticated attack. For example, the Exxon-Mobil Speedpass uses a
cryptographically-enabled tag manufactured by Texas Instruments,
called the Digital
Signature Transponder (DST), which incorporates a weak, proprietary encryption
scheme to perform a challenge-response protocol.
Still other cryptographic protocols attempt to achieve privacy against
unauthorized readers, though these protocols are largely in the research stage.
One major challenge in securing RFID tags is a shortage of computational
resources within the tag. Standard cryptographic techniques require more
resources than are available in most low cost RFID devices. RSA
Security has patented a prototype device that locally jams RFID signals by
interrupting a standard collision avoidance
protocol, allowing the user to prevent identification if desired. Various
policy measures have also been proposed, such as marking RFID tagged objects
with an industry standard label.

Exploits
Ars
Technica Reported in March 2006 an RFID buffer overflow bug that
could infect airport terminal RFID Databases for baggage, and also Passport
databases to obtain confidential information on the passport holder.

Passports
In an effort to make passports more secure, several countries have
implemented RFID in passports. However, the encryption on UK chips was broken in
under 48 hours. Since that
incident, further efforts have allowed researchers to clone passport data while
the passport is being mailed to its owner. Where, previously, a criminal had to
secretly open and then reseal the envelope, now it can be done without
detection, adding some degree of insecurity to the passport system.

Protection against interception
Various methods can be used to protect against RFID data interception:
- Most RFID chips can be disabled by physical means: for example the RFID
chip inside RFID credit cards can be disabled by a sharp tap of a hammer.
- An even simpler method, of use with passports for example, is wrapping the
RFID-equipped item in aluminum foil.
(See #Shielding below about
how aluminum foil may only make transmission more difficult and not completely
block it.)
- One can prevent the RFID transponders from receiving power. This is
accomplished by obstructing the power supply; one approach is to shield the
RFID transponders in a Faraday cage,
intercepting the electromagnetic signal which normally powers them. UHF
transponders can be shielded using an anti-static bag. LF and HF
(inductively-coupled) transponders can be shielded with conventional aluminum
foil.
- One can simply damage the antenna. With larger RFID transponders one can
recognize the spirals of the antenna clearly by use of a radiograph. If one splits
the antenna circuit, the effective range of the RFID transponder will be
greatly reduced.
- An intense electromagnetic impulse applied to the transponders and antenna
can induce high currents, interrupting the circuit and rendering the tag
useless. A crude way to do this is putting the RFID tag in a microwave oven.
Success may vary, depending on the frequency of the microwave and the shape of the
antenna. A device built to destroy transponders is the RFID-Zapper.
- The system can be blocked by sending a spurious signal in conjunction with
the inquiry signal, preferably on the RFID frequency. This blocks the
relatively weak signals of the RFID transponder.
- If a simple memory chip is used to confirm the authenticity of the
inquiry, then one can record the inquiry and at a later time reverse engineer
the signal, allowing replication. For the reader it appears as if the correct RFID
transponder were in the field.
- Many RFID tags include a built-in 'kill' function. When provided with the
correct pass-code, a tag can be either reprogrammed or told to 'self
destruct', rendering it useless.
- Newer emerging RFID tags may include some sort of built in
transfer-of-control and privacy enhancing technologies to ensure the owner can
control and prevent linkage of RFID using silencing or non-linkable protocols.

Shielding
A number of products are available on the market in the US that will allow a
concerned carrier of RFID-enabled cards or passports to shield their data. In
fact the United States government requires their new employee ID cards to be
delivered with an approved shielding sleeve or holder[citation
needed]. There are contradicting opinions as to whether
aluminum can prevent reading of RFID chips. Some people claim that aluminum
shielding, essentially creating a Faraday cage, does
work. Others
claim that simply wrapping an RFID card in aluminum foil, only makes
transmission more difficult, yet is not completely effective at preventing
it.
Shielding is again a function of the frequency being used. Low-frequency
tags, like those used in implantable devices for humans and pets, are relatively
resistant to shielding, though thick metal foil will prevent most reads. High
frequency tags (13.56 MHz — smart cards and access badges) are more
sensitive to shielding and are difficult to read when within a few centimetres
of a metal surface. UHF tags (pallets
and cartons) are very difficult to read when placed within a few millimetres of
a metal surface, although their read range is actually increased when they are
spaced 2–4 cm from a metal due to positive reinforcement of the reflected wave
and the incident
wave at the tag. UHF tags can be successfully shielded from most reads by
being placed within an anti-static plastic bag.

Cancer risk
On September 8, 2007, veterinary and toxicology
studies spanning the last ten years surfaced indicating that RFID chips induced
malignant tumors
in laboratory animals. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the agency that
approved the use of the chips in the United States, refused to respond to
questions from the media about their awareness of the studies. VeriChip Corp.
maintains that the chips are completely safe and that they were unaware of
the studies. The studies were somewhat limited in scope, lacking
control groups that did not receive chips and failing to test large animals
such as dogs, cats, or primates. As a result, most of the studies caution
against making assumptions regarding RFID chip carcinogenicity in humans
based solely on study results.

Controversies

Logo of the anti-RFID campaign by German privacy group
FoeBuD.

Privacy
How would you like it if, for instance, one day you realized your
underwear was reporting on your whereabouts? — California State Senator Debra
Bowen, at a 2003
hearing.
The use of RFID technology has engendered considerable controversy and even
product boycotts by consumer privacy
advocates such as Katherine Albrecht
and Liz
McIntyre of CASPIAN who refer to RFID tags
as "spychips". The two main privacy concerns
regarding RFID are:
- Since the owner of an item will not necessarily be aware of the presence
of an RFID tag and the tag can be read at a distance without the knowledge of
the individual, it becomes possible to gather sensitive data about an
individual without consent.
- If a tagged item is paid for by credit card or in conjunction with use of
a loyalty card, then it
would be possible to indirectly deduce the identity of the purchaser by
reading the globally unique ID of that item (contained in the RFID tag).
Most concerns revolve around the fact that RFID tags affixed to products
remain functional even after the products have been purchased and taken home and
thus can be used for surveillance and other
purposes unrelated to their supply chain inventory functions.
The concerns raised by the above may be addressed in part by use of the Clipped
Tag. The Clipped Tag is an RFID tag designed to increase consumer privacy.
The Clipped Tag has been suggested by IBM researchers Paul
Moskowitz and Guenter Karjoth. After the point of sale, a consumer may tear
off a portion of the tag. This allows the transformation of a long-range tag
into a proximity tag that still may be read, but only at short range – less than
a few inches or centimeters. The modification of the tag may be confirmed
visually. The tag may still be used later for returns, recalls, or
recycling.
However, read range is both a function of the reader and the tag itself.
Improvements in technology may increase read ranges for tags. Having readers
very close to the tags makes short range tags readable. Generally, the read
range of a tag is limited to the distance from the reader over which the tag can
draw enough energy from the reader field to power the tag. Tags may be read at
longer ranges than they are designed for by increasing reader power. The limit
on read distance then becomes the signal-to-noise ratio of the signal reflected
from the tag back to the reader. Researchers at two security conferences have
demonstrated that passive UHF RFID tags, not of the HF type used in US
passports, normally read at ranges of up to 30 feet, can be read at ranges of 50
to 69 feet using suitable equipment.
Another privacy issue is due to RFID's support for a singulation
(anti-collision) protocol. This
is the means by which a reader enumerates all the tags responding to it without
them mutually interfering. The structure of some collision-resolution (Medium
Access Control) protocols is such that all but the last bit of each tag's
serial
number can be deduced by passively eavesdropping on just the
reader's part of the protocol. Because of this, whenever the relevant
types of RFID tags are near to readers, the distance at which a tag's signal can
be eavesdropped is irrelevant; what counts is the distance at which the much
more powerful reader can be received. Just how far this can be depends on the
type of the reader, but in the extreme case some readers have a maximum power
output of 4 W,
enabling signals to be received from tens of kilometres away.[citation
needed] However, more recent UHF tags employing the
EPCglobal Gen 2 (ISO 18000-6C) protocol, which is a slotted-Aloha
scheme in which the reader never transmits the tag identifying information,
are not subject to this particular attack.
Technical note: the anti-collision scheme of ISO 15693 will render this
rather implausible. To eavesdrop on the reader part of the protocol – and gather
the 63 least significant bits of a uid – would require the reader to send a mask
value of 63 bits. This can only happen when the reader detects a collision up to
the 63rd bit. In other words: One can eavesdrop on the transmitted mask-value of
the reader, but for the reader to transmit a 63 bit mask-value requires two tags
with identical least significant 63 bits. The probability of this happening must
be near zero. I.e. the eavesdropper needs two virtually identical tags to be
read at the same time by the reader in question. (However, "blocker tags"
can readily be produced, for example to protect privacy from RFID surveillance,
which can simulate collisions at any time). In any discussion of eavesdropping
and skimming, it is important to make a distinction between inductively-coupled
and radiatively-coupled tags. Protocols like ISO 15693 use 13.56 MHz radio
frequencies and inductive coupling between the tag and reader. The signal power
falls very rapidly to extremely low levels a few antenna diameters away from the
reader when inductive coupling is used, so an attacker must be within a few
meters to intercept the reader signal, and closer to read a tag. Protocols like
18000-6C, which use 900 MHz signals, usually use radiative coupling between
tag and reader; a wave is launched, whose power falls roughly as the square of
the distance. Tag signals can be intercepted from ten meters away under good
conditions, and the reader signal can be detected from kilometers away if there
are no obstructions.
The potential for privacy violations with RFID was demonstrated by its use in
a pilot program by the Gillette
Company, which conducted a "smart shelf" test at a Tesco in
Cambridge, England. They
automatically photographed shoppers taking RFID-tagged safety razors off the
shelf, to see if the technology could be used to deter shoplifting. This trial
resulted in consumer boycott against Gillette and Tesco. In another incident,
uncovered by the Chicago Sun-Times,
shelves in a Wal-Mart in Broken Arrow,
Oklahoma,
were equipped with readers to track the Max Factor Lipfinity lipstick
containers stacked on them. Webcam images of the shelves were
viewed 750 miles (1200 km) away by Procter & Gamble researchers in Cincinnati,
Ohio, who could tell when lipsticks
were removed from the shelves and observe the shoppers in action.[citation
needed]
Richard Stallman at
WSIS 2005 presenting his RFID badge wrapped with aluminium foil as a way of
protesting RFID privacy issues.
In January 2004 privacy advocates from CASPIAN and the German privacy
group FoeBuD were invited to the METRO
Future Store in Germany, where an RFID pilot
project was implemented. It was uncovered by accident that METRO "Payback"
customer loyalty cards contained
RFID tags with customer IDs, a fact that was disclosed neither to customers
receiving the cards, nor to this group of privacy advocates. This happened
despite assurances by METRO that no customer identification data was tracked and
all RFID usage was clearly disclosed.
The controversy was furthered by the accidental exposure of a proposed Auto-ID
consortium public relations campaign that was
designed to "neutralize opposition" and get consumers to "resign themselves to
the inevitability of it" whilst merely pretending to address their concerns.
During the UN World
Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) between the 16th to 18th of
November, 2005, founder of the free software
movement, Richard Stallman,
protested the use of RFID security cards. During the first meeting, it was
agreed that future meetings would no longer use RFID cards, and upon finding out
this assurance was broken, he covered his card in tin foil, and would only
uncover it at the security stations. This protest caused the security personnel
considerable concern, with some not allowing him to leave a conference room in
which he had been the main speaker, and then the prevention of him entering
another conference room, where he was due to speak.[citation
needed]
In 2004-2005 the Federal Trade
Commission Staff conducted a workshop and review of RFID privacy concerns
and issued a report recommending best practices.
RFID was one of the main topics of 2006 Chaos
Communication Congress (organized by the Chaos Computer Club
in Berlin) and
triggered a big press debate. Topics included: electronic passports, Mifare
cryptography and the tickets for the FIFA World Cup 2006. Talks showed how the
first real world mass application of RFID technology at the 2006 FIFA Soccer
World Cup worked. Group monochrom staged a special
'Hack RFID' song.

Human implantation
The Food and Drug
Administration in the US has approved the use of RFID chips in humans.
Some
business establishments have also started to chip customers, such as the
Baja Beach nightclub in Barcelona. This has provoked
concerns into privacy of individuals as they can potentially be tracked wherever
they go by an identifier unique to them. There are concerns this could lead to
abuse by an authoritarian government or lead to removal of freedoms.
On July
22, 2006, Reuters
reported that two hackers, Newitz and Westhues, at a conference in New York City
showed that they could clone the RFID signal from a human implanted RFID chip,
showing that the chip is not hack-proof as was previously believed. Some
conspiracy theories surrounding the chip point out the dangers it could pose to
the freedom and liberty of people if it were to be common place in the future.
Furthermore, it might lead society into a "1984 state aparatus system" that
could potentially mean the end to free speech. Opinions such as this are pointed
out in the 2006 award winning documentary Zeitgeist,
which suggest that the RFID chip being implanted in every person in the future
could very well happen through a campaign of fear implemented by a totalitarian
regime.

RFID implant as the mark of the beast
Some Christians, believe that RFID
tagging could represent the mark of the beast,
which Revelation 13:16-17 says will be placed by the Antichrist in the right
hands or foreheads of humans and necessary for commerce.
And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free
and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:
And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the
name of the beast, or the number of his name.
- Revelation 13:16-17
Katherine Albrecht
and Liz
McIntyre, authors of Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan
to Track Your Every Move with RFID, wrote a new book on the subject. John
Conner, leader of an organization called "The Resistance of Christ" also
believes there is a strong connection. Related subjects include eschatology (
last things) and dispensationalism. Rev. Irvin
Baxter Jr's Website www.endtime.com provides an in depth video analysis on the
topic titled "mark of the beast."

See also

|