Philips to add "disable" to RFID tags

By Winston Chai, ZDNet Asia
Tuesday, May 06, 2003 10:13 AM
In response to privacy concerns over the use of radio frequency identity (RFID) technology, Philips will include a "kill command" in its chips.

Christoph Duverne, vice president of marketing and sales at Philips Semiconductors' Identification group said in engineering journal EETimes that the company will offer an option that allows its radio tags to be disabled when its use is no longer required.

Duverne said Philips is sensitive to privacy concerns stemming from the use of RFID technology, although he feels such worries are often misguided.

"This is not GPS (Global Positioning System) technology. The RFID tags alone can only store product information, not personal information," he was quoted as saying.

The use of radio tags, considered by many to be the future for inventory tracking, has sparked some consumer fury, while those in favor laud its superiority over bar codes.

With RFID chips, firms can have precise information about stock levels and inventory movement with the wave of a reader wand.

However, consumers fear the tags can also be used to monitor their whereabouts. In addition, RFID makes it technically possible for marketers to obtain invaluable information on a host of consumer preferences, ranging from the clothes they like to the food they prefer.

Earlier this year, U.S.-based privacy group Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering lashed out at Benetton and called for a worldwide boycott soon after plans to use RFID tags were announced by the clothing maker.

Benetton has since clarified that the firm is merely evaluating radio tags, and has not firmed up plans for commercial deployment.

In a related announcement, Philips said a German supermarket chain has adopted its radio frequency tracking technology.

Metro Group opened a supermarket last Monday in Rheinberg, a city in Western Germany, to showcase emerging retail technologies. The shop uses Philips' RFID-enabled i.code chips.

In a report by the Associated Press, Metro said it will disable the tags after checkout. However, the tags are now being used mostly to replace bar codes on boxes and pallets--at US$1 a tag, they cost too much to be used on lower-priced items.

Metro said it will wait till the price per tag comes down to about three US cents before considering using them on all items, said the report.

When that happens, customers will be able to scan in the items into a reader-equipped shopping cart, then pay the displayed total at the checkout.


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Disabler! Yeah I bet it works like whne you are at Home Depot and someone just pays for there tools and walks out and still the alarm fires up. I still say that there must be a better solution like that of the tagblocker and tagzapper. People need to be able to make sure the RFID is disabled.


YOu can find more about this topic at www.zombiewire.com I believe there is link back here....................:)
Posted by Gilbert Herrera on Saturday, November 27 2004 11:47 PM

By: James Mata
at: 2004-11-29 14:34:13



RFID THE PERFECT STORM
By James Mata
Zombie Wire RFID World News
November 26 2004


We the consumers are at a brink in life where we will move from the simple task at the market place to purchase supplies for home, office, motor home and others as you can imagine. We walk in the store and purchase these items and hand down cash or card for the items scanned using the barcode system. Seems pretty simple however none threatening to your privacy. However these times have come to an end. You might as well say it is at your door right now, but 90 percent of all consumers are non- aware of this fact. This reason is that if that percentage knew of this fact then the process would stop in its tracks because of what is behind the new movement and normal people would not want it to continue with this.
Wal-Mart the “super power” monster store found a new direction in how they will run their shop and being so they informed the supply chain around the world to make it so with all products purchased by Wal-Mart. Having mandated the supply chained complied and this set off the shot heard around the business world. All retail competitors had to follow the lead in order to compete. The mandate is that all items sold via Wal-Mart will have a Radio Frequency Identification chip or in simple terms RFID chip implanted in all products sold.
What is an RFID?

What is RFID?
Radio frequency identification, or RFID, is a generic term for technologies that use radio waves to automatically identify individual items. There are several methods of identifying objects using RFID, but the most common is to store a serial number that identifies a product, on a microchip that is attached to an antenna (called an RFID transponder or an RFID tag).

AT this time as the Trojan horse at the door consequently there is nothing we can do about it because the gears are in motion; however, we need to learn everything we can about the RFID movement to maintain our privacy rights. You will not be able to “sell” any products without the RFID as you see in the barcode today. This RFID chip will go home with you and one day your home will be filled up with RFID chips. How would you feel if your home items were public knowledge from a certain book you have to what style and size under pants? You ask how that may become public awareness. Theoretically speaking if a van pulled out side your home with a RFID transponder, there is way for that person in the van to inventory your private life, and who knows what would take place once that knowledge is out. You ever heard the saying “keep and honest man honest: approach? Think about this!

Likewise, the RFID market has not stoped here and it will continue to transpire to greater levels beyond our comprehension. There is a RFID chip out now called the Verichip. This Verichip is imbedded in the human body. This Verichip may store your Visa Card, bank debit card and social security and other information that takes the place of your purse.

The perfect storm: In theory, what will become of the Verichip by means of how we see progress continue to unfold? Will the Verichip be mandate as the RFID chip is mandate for all products you buy or sell? If you do not agree with this mandate will you be able to buy or sell?
I will leave you with this “Buyer Beware”

You can find all your RFID insight where you get both sides of the fence so please go and visit www.zombiewire.com
Posted by anonymous on Sunday, December 05 2004 11:43 PM


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