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The Science
Daily article Nano-Based
RFID Tags Could Replace Bar Codes [1] announces with
breathless excitement that we may be on the verge of nano-scale RFIDs. The
implications extend far beyond tracking inventory in warehouses, even if the
devices perform only passively at the hoped for range of 300m.
These devices would be by design tiny and
ubiquitous, likely embedded in products such that they are not only
undetectable when the product is in use, but also integrated into the product
in such a way that their removal would be impossible without damaging or destroying
the object in question.
There are already some grave concerns [2]
regarding tradeoffs in efficiency versus privacy and safety in RFID-enabled passports:
do you really want anyone who cares to install the proper equipment to be able
to identify you as carrying a U.S. passport the moment you walk though their
door? There are certainly places today where such identification could be
actively dangerous to the passport holder. Passports, at least, are specific
enough items that it might not be unreasonable to expect that those carrying
them should take measures to protect them from casual snooping, just as one
might take care where one carries a wallet or credit card. Use your favorite
search engine to see how many hits you get for “passport RFID blocker” – there
are already multiple products on the market designed to address this concern.
Imagine instead that nearly everything on or
about your person is labeled with an RFID which identifies manufacturer and
item number – not at all unreasonable if you are the manufacturer working to
track your inventory, but potentially problematic if you are the end consumer.
From an arbitrary distance, say, that 300m or less figure quoted in the Science Daily article someone can
generate a profile of you without even needing to focus upon you as a specific
individual. You might pass through a portal or doorway and be identified as
having $3000 worth of clothing and electronics on your person. You might subsequently
be selected for a targeted sales pitch or to be followed with intent for
unspecified mayhem.
One might sprinkle nano RFIDs on or about one’s
premises for simple inventory – sprinkle first then catalog later: the rough
collection of these RFID IDs
correlates to the printer, and those
to the postage meter. If a few fall off, so be it, there are still a few
hundred with unique identifiers; more than enough to specify a particular item.
This would be wonderful for tracking material through a manufacturing process
or simply for keeping track of what is where. It might also be useful for a third
party wishing to track you without your knowledge. If the little nano RFIDs are
a bit more capable, they enter the realm of smart
dust [3] – able to record and transmit
data. [4] Again, incredibly useful if you want to monitor conditions in
your shipping container or warehouse, but potentially problematic from a privacy
standpoint.
Concerns regarding privacy issues and
potential for abuse aside, this technology is coming: the world of ubiquitous
sensors is not so much “if” but “when and how.” There is just too much upside
for manufacturers or any entity that desires to track and inventory . . .
anything.
Question: how will we mitigate the new set of
risks that will be created as this technology evolves? Disabling all the RFIDs on your gear/clothing will
eventually make you as noticeable as disabling none of them . . .
Further reading
Pister: Smart Dust in
2010. He has the timing off (obviously) but many of his projections are
being developed actively.
Privacy
concerns grow with the use of RFID tags MartÃnez-Cabrera,
A. SF Gate (September 6 2010). Short
consumer article outlining some broad concerns regarding RFID use.
References
[1] Nano-Based RFID Tags Could Replace Bar Codes.
ScienceDaily. (Mar. 19, 2010) http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/03/100318113300.htm accessed 9 October 2012.
[2] A Threat Analysis of
RFID Passports. Waldo, J. et al Queue. (October 1 2009) http://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=1626175
accessed 9 October 2012
[3] 'Smart dust' aims to
monitor everything. Sutter, J.D. CNN
(May 03, 2010) http://articles.cnn.com/2010-05-03/tech/smart.dust.sensors_1_smart-dust-sensors-kris-pister?_s=PM:TECH
accessed 9 October 2012.
[4] SMART DUST: Autonomous sensing and communication in a cubic millimeter. Website: http://robotics.eecs.berkeley.edu/~pister/SmartDust/
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