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   KEYWORDS : RADIO FREQUENCY IDENTIFICATION TAGS
News Resources Bibliography
Study Says Chips in ID Tags Are Vulnerable to Viruses -- John Markoff  -- New York Times  -- March 15, 2005

A group of European computer researchers have demonstrated that it is possible to insert a software virus into radio frequency identification tags, part of a microchip-based tracking technology in growing use in commercial and security applications.

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Graduate Cryptographers Unlock Code of 'Thiefproof' Car Key -- John Schwartz  -- New York Times  -- January 29, 2005

A team of researchers at Johns Hopkins University have cracked the RFID security system behind the new "immobilizer" automobile security system.

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U.S. passport privacy: Over and out? -- Hiawatha Bray  -- Boston Globe  -- December 23, 2004

Privacy advocates argue that a new U.S. proposal to put radio identification tags (RFID) in all U.S. passports is unnecessary and will needlessly broadcast personal information to anyone listening.

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Fish bar code system under development -- Yomiuri Shimbun  -- Daily Yomiuri  -- August 16, 2004

A new cell phone information system is being developed to enable consumers to receive detailed information about fish at retail stores, including where and when the fish was caught and by whom

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The Trouble with RFID -- Simson Garfinkel  -- Nation  -- February 03, 2004

Simson Garfinkel examines the privacy risks of Radio Frequency Identification tags.

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How to Find That Needle Hopelessly Lost in the Haystacks -- Barnaby J. Feder  -- New York Times  -- September 29, 2003

Radio frequency identification tags, small tages equipped with microchips and tiny antennas, could revolutionize inventory and supply management if privacy concerns can be worked out.

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Tech Wave 2: The Sensor Revolution -- Heather Green  -- Business Week  -- August 25, 2003

Sensor networks promise a mammoth extension of the Internet. Within five years, these sensor computers could be shrunk to the size of a grain of sand and deployed over much of the globe, resulting in thousands of new networks.

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They Know Where You Are -- Jay Warrior, Eric McHenry & Kenneth McGee  -- IEEE Spectrum  -- July 01, 2003

New technologies can pinpoint your location at any time and place. They promise safety and convenience?but threaten privacy and security.

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RFID tags: Big Brother in small packages -- Declan McCullagh  -- CNET  -- January 13, 2002

Advances in manufacturing radio frequency identification could soon make it feasible for manufacturers to insert them into their products to track and identify consumers.

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