RFID Guardian Protects Your Privacy
An anonymous reader writes "A new device devised by Amsterdam graduate student Melanie Rieback is designed to serve as a portable firewall for RFID tags. The portable battery-powered RFID Guardian uses an access control list to filter RFID queries, blocking queries that aren't approved. Rieback, who is also known for being the first researcher to develop a proof of concept RFID virus, hopes to offer version 3.0 of the RFID Guardian to the public at cost."
or the radar detector, will this remain legal? Why have an RFID vs. the same info on a barcode, unless the design is to be able to read said info without your knowledge?
We are all just people.
For instance, store inventory. Walk down an aisle with an RFID reader - 5 minutes to a perfect count. Walk down the same aisle, with a barcode scanner, and scan every item one at a time - many hours, if yer lucky.
Actually you made a mistake,it is 5 minutes to a perfect count, but only a perfect count of the rfid chips......It still does not tell you how many of the product is actually on the shelves.