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Thursday, 19.09.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

Radio Frequency Identification

  • USA: Legislator pushes for RFID ban in California

    The sponsor of controversial legislation that would ban most uses of radio frequency identification in California is making a final push for passage of his bill before the Assembly adjourns Sept. 9.

    State Sen. Joe Simitian (D) is ramping up his efforts to persuade the state legislature to approve his Identity Information Protection Act of 2005, SB628. The measure would prohibit use of RFID for three years for driver’s licenses and student identification, library and health insurance cards.

  • USA: Med school CIO tests RFID for patients

    Implanted chip provides records on demand

    An RFID chip the size of two grains of rice and encased in a glass container was implanted in back of the right arm near the elbow of John Halamka, CIO of Harvard Medical School, just before Christmas.

  • USA: NIST Completes RFID Security Guidelines

    The National Institute of Standards and Technology's report describes the risks to data security and personal privacy that RFID deployments may pose, and provides best practices and procedures to mitigate those dangers.

    The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), a non-regulatory agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce (DOC), released this week its guidelines describing the various risks to data security and personal privacy that RFID deployments may pose, while also providing best practices and procedures, based on existing technology and regulations, to mitigate those risks. The 154-page report, Guidelines for Securing Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Systems, is meant to assist retailers, manufacturers, hospitals, federal agencies and other organizations in understanding how to deploy RFID technology securely and safely.

  • USA: Report: Government has major role in RFID development

    In Marin County, Calif., the district attorney’s office is embedding radio frequency identification tags in paper files to track and locate them. Libraries in Virginia Beach, Va., are implanting every book, CD, audiotape and video with RFID tags for self-checkout and other benefits. The Energy Department is using RFID tags on hazardous waste containers shipped to landfills.

    Public-sector usage of RFID technology is growing as officials continue to weigh implementation and maintenance costs against time, labor and cost savings. But the federal government also has a major role in establishing international standards, broadening research into the technology and helping to create a new RFID market, according to a new report published by the IBM Center for the Business of Government.

  • USA: RFID im Krankenhaus verhinderte Kindesentführung

    Kinderkleidung soll ebenfalls das Verschwinden von Kindern vereiteln

    Im US-Bundesstaat North Carolina konnte mit Hilfe von RFID-Technik, die das Presbyterian Hospital in der Stadt Charlotte einsetzt, eine Kindesentführung verhindert werden. Das System stammt von VeriChip, die mit dem "Hugs RFID Infant Protection System" eine Sicherheits-Lösung für Krankenhäuser anbietet.

  • USA: RFID resonates

    Big organizations jump on board as radio frequency ID technology matures

    Proponents of radio frequency identification technology are calling it the killer application of the decade. They believe RFID is fully equal to what the Internet was for the 1990s: a truly revolutionary change in the way business is done.

    Its critics, on the other hand, contend that RFID is more like an overhyped technology craze that eventually will fall under its own weight. Who’s right? Only the technology gods know for sure.

  • USA: RFID set for growth explosion

    US government becomes enthusiastic user as business cases emerge

    US government spending on radio frequency identification (RFID) technology is expected to rocket 120 per cent by 2009, public sector analyst firm Input has predicted.

    Although the study expects that growth within civilian agencies will start slowly, it forecasts substantial growth in 2007 as business cases emerge demonstrating similar cost benefits in areas outside the supply chain process.

  • USA: RFID-Chips gegen Fehloperationen

    Die amerikanische Food and Drug Administration (FDA) hat den Einsatz von RFID-Chips zur Patientenidentifikation zugelassen. Der Surgichip der gleichnamigen Firma soll verhindern, dass Patienten der falschen Operation unterzogen werden.
  • USA: RFID-Sender für Häftlinge

    Alanco Technologies soll im Auftrag des Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department (LASD) im Rahmen eines Pilotprojektes ein kalifornisches Gefängnis in Castaic mit seiner Überwachungstechnologie TSI PRISM ausstatten. Die Kosten für die computergestützte Kontrolle der 1800 Insassen wird auf 1,5 Millionen US-Dollar geschätzt. Bei positiven Ergebnissen hofft das Unternehmen auf zusätzliche Mittel, um weitere Gefängnisse ausstatten zu können. Die Zahl der überwachten Häftlinge würde sich so auf 18.000 erhöhen. Alanco berechnet das Marktpotential für Sicherheitssysteme in Gefängnissen auf 1,4 Milliarden US-Dollar.
  • USA: State hits the road with e-passports

    Diplomats travel with RFID technology, despite doubts and a dearth of products

    Amid continued doubts from experts, and with only one approved technology vendor, the State Department is pressing forward with its electronic passport program.

    It started issuing e-passports to its diplomatic corps on Jan. 1 and by last week had distributed 299 of them, according to State spokeswoman Laura Tischler. The department plans to roll out the contactless chip technology for the general public this summer, officials said.

  • USA: State to DHS: Take a pass on using long-range RFID

    Technical commitee backs claims about security shortcomings

    The State Department has learned the hard way over the past year that choosing long-range radio frequency identification for moving people across the border is fraught with peril. The hullabaloo over development of its electronic passport made that clear.

    Now, State officials are trying to pass those tough lessons on to the Homeland Security Department as the two agencies debate how to construct the People Access Security Services card. DHS officials, however, say they’re determined to stick with RFID.

  • USA: State unveils plans for PASS card

    IT vendors and the general public now will have a clearer view of the State Department’s plans for the radio frequency identification device-equipped border crossing card that Uncle Sam plans to deploy as part of the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative. The department today issued a Request for Information that describes its plans for the credential and its use in detail, as well as inquiring about the possible costs of equipment needed to produce and field the Passport Cards.
  • USA: Texas bill would replace vehicle inspection stickers with RFID tags

    Privacy experts have concerns about the proposal

    A Texas legislator has filed a bill that would, in part, call for the state to replace vehicle inspection stickers with radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, otherwise known as transponders.

    But the idea doesn't sit well with some privacy experts.

  • USA: The Government And RFID: What You Need To Know

    Different agencies have vastly different requirements, so VARs need to tailor RFID solutions accordingly

    With Input predicting federal spending on RFID to grow 120 percent over the next five years, VARs need to understand different agency needs if they want to get in on the action, according to a panel of government IT representatives gathered on Thursday by the Bethesda chapter of the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association (AFCEA).

  • USA: Using RFID delays DHS Pass card release

    Smart Card Alliance suggests agency may miss initiative deadline

    The Homeland Security Department’s proposed People Access Security Services cards, or Pass cards, are intended to serve as a low-cost alternative to passports to meet the requirements of the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative.

    Secretary Michael Chertoff has said that the initiative will be fully in effect by summer of 2008, requiring all travelers in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean to carry passports, Pass cards or other approved documents.

  • USA: VA’s dose of WiFi

    Wireless system making the rounds at hospitals

    Medication and medical mistakes contribute to 98,000 patients deaths each year in the United States. The Veterans Affairs Department is leading an effort to reduce that number with a wireless application designed to ensure that patients receive the correct medications.

    VA not only has outpaced private hospitals in implementing health care IT systems, but the department is leapfrogging its private-sector counterparts in using mobile and wireless devices and applications directly in patient care.

  • USA: Wisconsin law bars forced RFID implants

    Measure takes effect this week; other states considering limits on technology

    Wisconsin this week will become one of the first states to ban the forcible implantation of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags into humans.

    The ban begins on Wednesday, when legislation signed on May 30 by Gov. James Doyle goes into effect. The act dictates that no person may force another to have a microchip implanted in his body. Violators face fines of $10,000 each day until the chip is removed.

  • USA: Wisconsin verbietet RFID-Implantate wider Willen

    Der US-Bundesstaat hat ein Gesetz erlassen, das mögliche Fehlentwicklungen im Ansatz unterbindet.

    Verbraucherschutzorganisationen warnen schon lange vor dem missbräuchlichen Einsatz der Funkfrequenz-Identifikation, englisch: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID). Allmählich beschäftigt sich auch der Gesetzgeber mit dem Thema - zumindest in den USA. Dort untersagt der Bundesstaat Wisconsin demnächst per Gesetz die Implementierung von RFID-Chips in die menschliche Haut - es sei denn, der Träger stimmt ausdrücklich zu.

  • USA:DHS tests RFID technology for foot, vehicle traffic at entry points

    The Homeland Security Department plans to install antennas in travel lanes at five locations to detect RFID chips embedded in travel documents carried by international visitors passing through ports of entry into the United States.

    The biometric pilot program, which will run from Aug. 1 through March 2006, is designed to speed both vehicle and pedestrian traffic through the entry ports of Nogales East and Nogales West in Arizona, Alexandria Bay in New York and the Pacific Highway and Peace Arch in Washington state.

  • VDE sieht Deutschland bei RFID europaweit in Führung

    Intelligente Funketiketten (RFID Radio Frequency Identification) können im Unternehmen einen wesentlichen Beitrag zur Kosteneinsparung, Effizienzsteigerung und höherer Sicherheit leisten.

    Schon bald sollen die Kosten der RFID-Chips nach Einschätzung von Branchenexperten des Verbands der Elektrotechnik, Elektronik und Informationstechnik (VDE) in der Größenordnung von einem Cent liegen. „Vom Chip über die Lesegeräte, die Vernetzung der Lesegeräte bis hin zu den dahinter liegenden Prozessen werden sich dann völlig neue Wertschöpfungsketten herauskristallisieren“, erklärte Volker Schanz, Geschäftsführer der Informationstechnischen Gesellschaft (ITG) im VDE, anlässlich einer Podiumsdiskussion auf der CeBIT in Hannover.

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