Slashdot Mirror


RFID Explained

SecurityFocus has a nice column summarizing the last year's worth of stories about RFID. Of course, you, diligent Slashdot reader, have read about many of these already. But for your slacker friends that need an RFID education in one easy-to-digest article, here you go.

5 of 305 comments (clear)

  1. The Register by marc_gerges · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Interesting Register Story on the subject....

  2. Explained??? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 0, Redundant


    Read the f'ing what?

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  3. Re:Interesting technology by joggle · · Score: 0, Redundant
    Isn't Wal-Mart adopting it?

    RTFA!! The guy almost blames Wal-Mart for the widespread adoption of the technology in consumer products.

  4. Re:Interesting technology by elwinc · · Score: 2, Redundant
    Here's a quote from the article, which, to me, indicates why we should all be against ubiquitous RFIDs:
    Right now, you can buy a hammer, a pair of jeans, or a razor blade with anonymity. With RFID tags, that may be a thing of the past. Some manufacturers are planning to tag just the packaging, but others will also tag their products. There is no law requiring a label indicating that an RFID chip is in a product. Once you buy your RFID-tagged jeans at The Gap with RFID-tagged money, walk out of the store wearing RFID-tagged shoes, and get into your car with its RFID-tagged tires, you could be tracked anywhere you travel. Bar codes are usually scanned at the store, but not after purchase. But RFID transponders are, in many cases, forever part of the product, and designed to respond when they receive a signal. Imagine everything you own is "numbered, identified, catalogued, and tracked." Anonymity and privacy? Gone in a hailstorm of invisible communication, betrayed by your very property.
    Spelling it out, this means institutions that choose to can automatically and cheaply start assembling a history of which RFID tags go where, and when. Still not scared? Next step: when the cops come to pick you up as a "material witness" they can easily scan your clothing and compare it to the RFID histories. Is everyone going to feel just as free to complain about the moron-in-chief, worship unpopular religions, and excercise their legal right to dissent against the powers-that-be if such technology becomes widespread?
    --
    --- Often in error; never in doubt!
  5. This is Wonderful news! by whoppers · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I can now RFID my keys, wallet sunglasses, ballpoint pens and every other damned thing I lose from now on out and I should always be able to recover them. What happens if you or your dog eats an RFID tag? Are they microwaveable? Microwaves kill about everything else, oughta kill RFID.