Abhilasha Ojha: Seminar Report ON
Abhilasha Ojha: Seminar Report ON
Abhilasha Ojha: Seminar Report ON
Abhilasha Ojha
Submitted in partial fulfillment for the Award of degree of
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that the Seminar entitled RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) has been carried out by ABHILASHA OJHA under my guidance in partial fulfillment of the degree of Bachelor of Computer Application during the academic year 2010-2011. To the best of my knowledge and belief this work has not been submitted elsewhere for the award of any other degree.
Examiner
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I express my sincere thanks to Miss Aakansha Rathore and Miss Anita Vyas Designation H.O.D and Asst. Professor, Lucky Institute of Professional Studies. For guiding me right from the inception till the successful completion of the Seminar. I sincerely acknowledge them for extending their valuable guidance, support for literature, Critical reviews of training and the report and above all the moral support they had provided to me with all stages of this Seminar.
CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 What is RFID? The basics 1.1.1 The Tag 1.1.2 The Reader 1.2 Why RFID is becoming important: Barcodes on steroids 1.3 Why a TechWatch report
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2. RFID TECHNOLOGY IN DETAIL Page 8 2.1 Energy Source: Passive or active? 2.2 Frequency 2.3 Memory 2.4 Standards 2.4.1 Air interface (frequency) standards 2.4.2 Data content and encoding 2.4.2.1 Electronic Product Code 2.4.2.2 Alternatives to EPC: IPv6 2.4.3 ISO Testing and Conformance. 2.4.4 Interoperability between applications and RFID systems 3. RFID APPLICATIONS IN EDUCATION 3.1 RFID in Libraries 3.2 Asset Location Management 3.3 People tracking and tagging 3.4 Intelligent Buildings and disabled access 3.5 Research applications Equipment and Activities 3.6 RFID in new Learning Environments 4. SOCIO-CULTURAL IMPLICATIONS 4.1 RFID and Privacy 4.1.1 RFID and the surveillance society 4.2 Approaches to Privacy Protection 4.3 Trusted computing, beta culture and the DIY culture 4.4 Privacy Legislation and Regulation 5. THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE: THE FIVE-CENT TAG 6. THE FUTURE AND THE BIGGER PICTURE: TOWARDS AN INTERNET OF THINGS 6.1 From identification to Wireless Sensor Networks 6.2 Spatial identifiers GPS 6.3 Miniaturization and motes 6.4 Technological implications information overload CONCLUSION Page 16
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY At the very simplest level, Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technologies allow the transmission of a unique serial number wirelessly, using radio waves. The two key parts of the system that are needed to do this are the RFID 'tag' and the 'reader'; attaching an RFID tag to a physical object allows the object to be 'seen' and monitored by existing computer networks and back-office administration systems. So far, the key driver for the development of RFID systems has been the desire to improve efficiency in globalised supply chains but implementation of the technology has been problematic. This is partly due to the manufacturing costs of tags, which are currently too high to justify widespread deployment across supply chains in the way that was originally imagined, and partly due to concerns over the potential for infringing the privacy of consumers who purchase RFID-tagged products. In addition, there are concerns about the health implications for staff employed in RFID-enabled workplaces, although this has not received as much attention in the press. One of the areas where RFID has been a cost effective deployment is within library systems, where, due to the high value of individual books and journals and the many ways in which each tag can deliver value (e.g. issue/returns, stocktaking etc.), the one-off cost of a tag is easily off-set by overall cost savings and efficiency gains. However, there is a second key significance for RFID technologies: RFID tags are capable of providing the technological 'glue' to join physical objects to computer networks, and this is an important part of the technological jigsaw that will enable the 'seamless' and 'calm' technology vision of ubiquitous computing. A key milestone in this development is the realisation of the Internet of Things, where increasingly large numbers of our everyday objects and gadgets will have some kind of simple communication technology embedded into them, allowing them to be connected to each other within local networks and, ultimately, connected to the wider network of networks the Internet. There are various ways in which RFID may impact on the core business of Further and Higher Education (F&HE) but in the short term, one of the critical factors will be how concerns about the potential for privacy infringement are reduced. Although these concerns have not had as high a profile in the UK as they have elsewhere, pressure from the EU will require UK F&HE to start addressing these issues, and it will ultimately be more cost effective and time efficient if this is done in a pro-active rather than a re-active way. The influence of the library sector, in its dual role as a public sector body acting in the 'public good' and working as a test-bed for the technology, has the potential to be important in setting the pace for establishing good practice in this area while the technology is still relatively new and there is still the opportunity to have an impact.
1. INTRODUCTION
The history of RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) can be tracked as far back as the 1920s with the birth of radar systems (the word radar is an acronym for radio detection and ranging). The development of the technology, a combination of radar and radio broadcast technology, is messy and convoluted but there is consensus that it developed from the work carried out during WW2 to identify enemy aircraft, known as 'Identification: Friend or Foe' (IFF) systems.
Figure 1: Class 1 tag insert (Butterfly style). Source: Courtesy of Intermec technologies
stock, estimated, in retail, to have been around 4% of annual sales in 2003 (McFarlane, 2003) and reduces shrinkage (loss of stock, including through theft) which is reported to have cost American companies $31.3 billion in 2003 (Deutsch, 2003). The current method of product tracking within supply chains is the barcode, but passive RFID tags provide some simple, but fundamental, advantages. Firstly, barcodes are usually printed on paper labels or packaging, and are therefore prone to damage. Secondly, although barcodes can provide inventory data to the level of product category, they can not provide additional data such as 'sell by' dates2; this type of extra functionality has the potential to be developed further for things like home automation, where, for example, RFID tags embedded in clothes may, in the future, be able to provide washing instructions to washing machines. Also, because RFID systems use radio frequencies to communicate, they are able to identify an object without a line of sight. This means that RFID tags can be identified while they are attached to items inside boxes or pallets, or even behind walls. This results in increased automation of handling processes when compared to barcodes, as barcodes need a line of sight in order to work. It also provides the capability for multiple, almost concurrent reads (in actual fact these are consecutive, but very quick). This speed-up, when magnified throughout todays globalised supply systems, indicates the scale of efficiency that RFID could potentially deliver, and explains why a large number of corporate and global businesses have invested heavily in the development of these systems.
It is worth noting that the nomenclature for the classes has changed over time (RFID Journal, 2006) and older documents and specifications also refer to a Class 0 tag. This is a simple, passive tag which has had its ID programmed in at the time of manufacture. A Class 1 device (under this older scheme) is the same as a Class 0, but it can have its ID programmed into the tag at a later date, after manufacture. Both of these tags are read-only, in the sense that the ID can only be programmed in once. Later specifications work by EPC Global has clarified this by merging Class 0 and Class 1 into a new superseding Class 1 (Traub et al., 2005). However, there is still a considerable body of literature, specification documentation and manufacturers material that refers to Class 0 tags and some tag manufacturers still offer a Class 0+ in which the ID is added at manufacture but can be altered later. For the purpose of this report we will consider Class 0 as absorbed into Class 1. It should be noted that Class 1 to 5 terminology is only used by EPC Global, and is not generic to RFID. Each successive class builds on functionality provided by the lower layers and in order to understand how this works it is helpful to look at what is meant by passive, semi-passive, and active. i.e. the use of harvested (or what is sometimes termed 'reflected') power and on-board power sources (Cheekiralla and Engels, 2005).
Passive Tag Systems do not have an on-board power source so they have to scavenge power from the reader in order to run the digital logic on the chip and issue a response to the reader. They can therefore only operate in the presence of a reader. The communication range is limited by the need for the reader to generate very strong signals to power the tag, which therefore limits the reader-to-tag range. In addition, the small amount of energy that the tag is able to harvest in order to power its response to the reader, means that the tag-to-reader range is also limited (to around four or five metres in UHF). However, as passive tags do not require a continuous power source they have a much longer lifecycle, and because of their minimal on-board circuitry they are much cheaper to produce. This means that passive RFID tags are more suitable for tagging individual product items for applications such as supermarket checkouts and smart cards. Semi-passive Tag Systems require the tag to use battery power for the digital logic on the chip, but still use harvested power for communication. Semi-passive tags are far more reliable and have greater read ranges than purely passive tags, but they also have shorter lives (due to their reliance on battery power), are more fragile, and are significantly more expensive. Active Tag Systems have an active radio frequency (RF) transmitter (i.e. they are capable of peer-to-peer communication) and the tags use batteries to power the logic chip and to communicate with the reader (i.e. they do not use harvested power). Read range increases (up to several kilometres) and reliability improves; active tags can be read while moving at up to 100 miles an hour (e.g. in automatic toll-road payment systems) and the readers are capable of reading up to a thousand tags per second. Active tags can also be equipped with built-in sensors e.g. for monitoring temperature control and reporting unacceptable fluctuations on refrigerated products whilst in transit, although this does increase the cost even more to over 55 (around $100 or 80) per tag (IDTechEx, 2005). They also have a much larger memory than passive tags and, due to their higher processing capabilities, are also more secure.
2.2 Frequency
RFID is fundamentally based on wireless communication, making use of radio waves, which form part of the electromagnetic spectrum (i.e. frequencies from 300kHz to 3 GHz). It is not unlike two other wireless technologies, WiFi and Bluetooth. The three technologies are all designed for very different uses and therefore have different functionalities but there is shared ground between the three, with some hybrids starting to appear. RFID systems can utilise both WiFi and Bluetooth and need not see them as competitors. RFID operates in unlicensed spectrum space, sometimes referred to as ISM (Industrial, Scientific and Medical) but the exact frequencies that constitute ISM may vary depending on the regulations in different countries3. These operating frequencies are generally considered to be organized into four main frequency bands and the table shows these different radio wave bands and the more common frequencies used for RFID systems (IEE, 2005).
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230 GHz
Frequency Typical RFID Frequencies 125134 kHz 13.56 MHz 433 MHz or 2.45 GHz 865 956MHz 2.45 GHz 433 MHz = up to 100 Up to 10m metres 865-956 MHz = 0.5 to 5 metres 433956 = 30 kbit/s 2.45 =100 kbit/s Up to 100 kbit/s
Up to 1.5 metres
Short-range, Characteristics low data transfer rate, penetrates water but not metal. Animal ID Car immobiliser
Higher ranges, reasonable data rate (similar to GSM phone), penetrates water but not metal. Smart Labels Contact-less travel cards Access & Security
Long ranges, high data transfer rate, concurrent read of <100 items, cannot penetrate water or metals Specialist animal tracking Logistics
Long range, high data transfer rate, cannot penetrate water or metal Moving vehicle toll
Typical use
N.B. Within a given frequency band the actual, real-world communication range will vary widely depending on factors such as the operating environment, the detail of the antenna design and the available system power (Dressen, 2004; Paret, 2005). There are two types of RFID system, each using different physical properties to enable communication between the reader and the tag (Thompson, 2006). The physics employed can become complex, but it is important to realize that it partly determines the operating range of the systems. RFID systems based on LF and HF frequencies make use of near field communication and the physical property of inductive coupling from a magnetic field. The reader creates a magnetic field between the reader and the tag and this induces an electric current in the tags antenna, which is used to power the integrated circuit and obtain the ID. The ID is communicated back to the reader by varying the load on the antennas coil which changes the current drawn on the readers communication coil; further detail of the physics of the operation can be found in ACM Queues RFID special edition (Want, 2004). RFID
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systems based on UHF and higher frequencies use far field communication and the physical property of backscattering or 'reflected' power. Far field communication is based on electric radio waves: the reader sends a continuous base signal frequency that is reflected back by the tags antenna. During the process, the tag encodes the signal to be reflected with the information from the tag (the ID) using a technique called modulation (i.e. shifting the amplitude or phase of the waves returned).
2.3 Memory
Tags come in a variety of forms with varying types of on-chip memory capability. Tags can be read-only (the unique ID code is permanently stored on the tag also known as WORM: Write Once Read Many), read/write (allowing a user to change the ID and add additional data to the tags memory), or they can be a combination, with a permanent tag ID and some storage space for the user's data. Passive tags typically have anywhere from 64 bits to 1 kilobyte of non-volatile memory. Active tags tend to have larger memories with a range of, typically, between 16 bytes and 128 kilobytes (Dressen, 2004; Zebra website4).
2.4 Standards
The number and use of standards within RFID and its associated industries is quite complex, involves a number of bodies and is in a process of development5. Standards have been produced to cover four key areas of RFID application and use: air interface standards6 (for basic tag-to-reader data communication), data content and encoding (numbering schemes), conformance (testing of RFID systems) and interoperability between applications and RFID systems (RFID Journal, 2006). There are several standards bodies involved in the development and definition of RFID technologies including: International Organisation of Standardisation (ISO) EPCglobal Inc7 European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
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ISO 18000-2 for frequencies below 135 kHz ISO 18000-3 for 13.56 MHz ISO 18000-4 for 2.45 GHz ISO 18000-6 for 860 to 960 MHz ISO 18000-7 for 433 MHz There are also earlier standards relating to, for example, cattle tracking systems (ISO 11785), tag-based payment proximity cards (ISO 14443) and electronic toll collection vicinity cards (ISO 15693). ISO 14443 and ISO 15693 both operate at 13.56MHz (HF), but the first standard has a read range of about 10cm whereas the later has a read range of 1 to 1.5 metres. The situation regarding frequencies is somewhat confused by the introduction, by EPC Global, of a separate air interface standard for UHF frequencies (covered by ISO 18000-6) for their early class 0 and class 1 tags. These tags are not interoperable with each other, nor are they compatible with ISOs air interface standards (RFID Journal, 2006). EPC Global has subsequently developed a second generation of protocols (GEN 2) that merge the old Class 0 and Class 1 passive tags and should be more closely aligned with the ISO, although disagreements remain between the two organisations at the time of writing. Obviously, supply chain managers and equipment vendors would like to see an agreed, international standard.
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provide for identifying a particular tin of beans. The Auto-ID Centers numbering system provides much greater scope for identification than barcodes, and consists of a 96-bit number, structured as follows:
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The EPC Network Architecture RFID tags and interrogators are rarely used in isolation; they form part of a supply chain, or a logistics, library or other system. The key concept is that the ID code embedded on an RFID tag can provide what database designers call a 'primary key' into a database of products. All additional data associated with that item can be stored in back-office databases and systems. The Auto-ID Center has developed an architectural overview and vision for the use of the EPCTM unique identifier in supply chain systems, known as the EPC Network Architecture. The architecture is layered, with tags and their associated readers operating at the bottom of an integrated system that is linked to database and manufacturers' back-office enterprise systems. The exact operational details of this complex architecture are beyond the scope of this report, however, we will note of some key components and related standards. Those interested in a more detailed examination of the network architecture, see Synthesis, 2004. Savant Savant is the middleware software system that links reader devices and processes the information streams from tags. It acts as the gateway to the enterprise systems and database applications, providing filtering, aggregation and counting of tag-based data. ONS The Object Naming Service (ONS) is 'the 'glue' that links the EPC with the associated data file' (Brock, 2001, p.1). Working much like the current Domain Naming Service of the World Wide Web it provides a look-up table for translating a unique EPC code into a Uniform Reference Locator (potentially a webpage) where additional information can be stored. The ONS system is built on the same technology used in the Internets Domain Name Service (DNS) (Brock, 2001). Physical Mark Up Language The Physical Markup Language (PML) is an XML-based common language designed to provide standardised vocabularies for describing a) physical objects, b) observations made by sensors and RFID readers about these objects and c) the observers (the sensors and readers) themselves and exchanging this data between entities operating within the EPCTM network architecture. PML uses the W3C XML Schema language (XSD) for its definition. Full details can be found in (Floerkemeier et al., 2003). The difficulty in describing physical objects is acknowledged by the Auto-ID Center (Brock et al., 2001), but the intention of PML is to give a structure to agreed object characteristics such as volume, mass, temperature, owner, location etc.
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interrogator's detection field can be critical in a system's security as leaving tagged items in close proximity to an issue/return station can result in them being discharged or issued unintentionally; in some instances, incorrect tuning of the detection field also meant that it was possible to evade the field completely (Marsterson, 2006). There is also a strong economic argument in favour of tagging valuable items such as library books. To date, uptake of RFID in general has been limited because even passive tags are still relatively expensive to produce (around 27 pence or 50 American cents, although this is continually reducing), so it makes no economic sense to tag inexpensive items (such as individual tins of baked beans). Within libraries, where individual books and journals can be worth hundreds of pounds, and will be borrowed and returned hundreds of time, the one-off cost of a tag is more than off-set by cost savings and efficiency gains. In the UK, Glasgow University Library was the first university library to install RFID (in 2002) and has been joined subsequently by a small number of university libraries including Middlesex and Nottingham Trent University. Similar systems are also being introduced in public libraries such as Norwich, Essex, Haringey, Somerset and Sutton, and CILIP the library professionals association - recently held their first major conference on the subject and have subsequently produced an RFID implementation checklist14. Standardisation work has also been strong in the library sector: in the UK the BIC/CILIP RFID in Libraries Committee has been working on possible data objects for library RFID systems and in Denmark, the national library authority developed a Working Group to bring together interested parties in the development of an RFID data model for libraries that has fed into the ISO TC46/sc4 work on the standardisation of protocols, schemas and related models and metadata. This position as early adopters, who also have a considerable amount of group bargaining power and a strong interest in developing standards, puts libraries in an interesting position. It could be argued that libraries are uniquely placed to have a positive impact on the development of RFID technology and that this influence could extend beyond current efforts to develop interoperability and data standards, to addressing more general issues that are 'in the public good' such as privacy concerns (see section four). Issues such as whether or not RFID tags are implemented in students' library cards and the frequencies that RFID interrogators operate at (i.e. open or regulated) are simple, but important starting points. It should also be noted that Danish libraries are generally accepted to be at the forefront of library-based RFID development, and that JISC's collaboration with the Danish National Library Authority along with the recent instigation of the Knowledge Exchange provide a timely opportunity for international collaboration and good practice sharing.
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to hospital managers via the hospitals WiFi network. This means that hospital staff can always locate valuable or important equipment very quickly, which increases efficiency (one hospital in America estimates savings of nearly 8,000 minutes per month) and can even save lives (Wexler, 2005). Such systems may well be introduced into UK university medical schools and the same technology could be used for tracking highly mobile equipment (such as laptops, projectors, research monitoring equipment etc.) within UK academic environments. The use of RFID technology is also starting to have implications for document tracking and business process workflows, an important issue in college and university administration departments and for registrar activities (e.g. tracking of completed exam papers). RFID tags in the form of labels that can be written on can be attached to paper documents. The tag's unique ID can be scanned by readers as the document passes through the administration system. By referring the tag ID back to a database of other information such as the documents history and expiration date, the document's status can be tracked. As readers can then obtain information from the label without line of sight scanning it would be easy to locate a mis-placed document simply by scanning a shelf of papers and books, and this would be particularly useful for university paper archiving systems.
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information 'grid' based on passive, low-cost, high frequency RFID tags installed under the flooring which is used to convey precise location and detailed attributes about the surrounding areas. RFID tags are placed along corridors, inside rooms and even outside, and store information about their immediate surroundings. An RFID reader is incorporated into a walking cane and shoe and uses sound to deliver directions (Willis and Helal, 2005).
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initiate their own access to information. In this way, RFID tags are used as a way of embedding user control within learning and gaming environments. Although to date these environments have been explored in the context of younger, school-aged children it is likely that more sophisticated versions of such environments will be introduced into Higher and Further education in coming years. These new learning environments are providing important test-beds for developing these ideas within an educational context.
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Within consumer scenarios, concerns have been raised about the capability to use RFID to track a customer's movement around a shop. This concept is not a new one for consumers, as most people are familiar with CCTV tracking, but RFID tracking logs are significantly smaller than CCTV output and are machine-processable (Engberg et al., 2004). To some people this may in itself be considered an invasion of privacy, but additional problems occur when shops keep persistent records that are traceable to identifiable customers. This problem is compounded when, for example, the RFID tag's unique ID can be obtained by any reader and that reader can also connect to the back-end RFID infrastructure (either through legal or illegal means), linking the unique ID to detailed tag information and even the purchase transaction. Some authors have argued that these problems are issues of RFID system security: if RFID systems were better designed, and had security at the heart of the design, then these kinds of privacy invasion would not be possible (Engberg et al., 2004). However, this assumes that there is a sufficiently robust legal system in place to redress the issue of people or organisations that do not deploy these 'secure' tags, and further, that the victim of the privacy invasion or identity theft is aware of when an 'illegal' RFID-enabled transaction is taking place. This means that ordinary consumers would need to be aware of issues such as when data collection is taking place, the potential use this data may be put to, and the potential consequences of both of these. An example used by anti-RFID campaigners provides a case in point for some of these issues. In Germany, the METRO Extra Future Store was set up as a test-bed for new 'intelligent' technologies, including a small selection of RFID-tagged items (Weber, 2004). Without going into a detailed description of what the campaigners found17 it appears that there were significant breaches of policy, resulting in 'hidden' tagging of customers through the shop's loyalty card. In addition, the shop's deactivation technology, designed to disable the passive RFID tags attached to individual items, was not completely successful, leading to some tags remaining 'live' even after customers had left the shop. Activists point to a scenario where a passive RFID tag, embedded in a new shoe, could be providing information to tag readers wherever the person walks: this information could then be combined to form a picture of a persons movements. These examples demonstrate several factors that can be extrapolated to give a more conceptual picture of the potential for privacy invasion: the ubiquity of RFID readers and tags and the fact that they can be hidden; the linking of a unique ID to other information contained in a database or other storage system; security and privacy risks that are created either maliciously or through neglect.
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Disabling RFID tags in consumer environments at the point of sale also means that the tag cannot be used by consumers as an enabling technology for ambient intelligence applications, for example, in advanced recycling applications where the tag's unique ID could be used to automatically sort recyclable material and could also be used to levy waste charges on the manufacturer based on the nature and volume of rubbish collected. Passive RFID tags used in consumer environments could also be used to deliver after sales services for product service records or to provide warranties. In order to try to address these issues there have been proposals for 'secure' tags equipped with 'handover protocols' to facilitate the transfer of ownership of the unique ID (so that different sets of readers would be able to read the tag at certain points in time) and systems that support 'multiple authorisations', where readers belonging to several authorised 'actors' may be able to read the tag at the same point in time (e.g. the consumer and the after sales service provider may both access the tag while the product is under warranty). However, it should be noted that solutions based on consumer consent offer no guarantee of privacy protection and may turn into some sort of advanced blackmail, where consumers have the impossible choice of not getting a service (e.g. warranty protection) unless they agree to the collection of personally identifiable information (Engberg et al., 2004). In addition, these types of advanced systems assume that the owner is capable of managing the technology and actually 'trusts' it to work as described.
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Similarly, in the US, the National Research Council's Committee on Radio Identification Frequencies Technologies held a workshop that observed that: 'on the consumer and regulatory side, there are many concerns and unanswered questions about the technologyfor example, what are the ramifications for personal privacy of embedding RFID tags in consumer products? Indeed, more than one company has had to change or rethink its plans for RFID technology because of the concerns of consumers and privacy advocates about how the technology would be used.' (NAP, 2004, page vii). Closer to home, the European Commission has just launched a public consultation on RFID, following on from the RFID inter-service group established last year to co-ordinate the gathering, analysis and internal dissemination of information concerning RFID technology and its uses. Outputs from the public consultation will be published as an online consultation document in September 2006 before the preparation of a Commission Communication on RFID, which is expected to be adopted before the end of the year. The Communication will also address the need for other legislative measures for RFID, such as decisions on allocation of spectrum and could lead to amendments of the e-privacy-Directive, which is up for review (European Commission, 2006). The Commission is also planning to support, in the forthcoming Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development, technology and innovative applications that bring us a step closer to the 'Ambient Intelligent Society'. There is no doubt that there are serious issues that will have to be dealt with seriously. Technologists, proponents of RFID and privacy experts are beginning to debate and address the issues raised by consumer groups, civil liberties groups etc. The issues that are engaging these groups include debating what privacy means in a technologically rich world, developing models of privacy threat, how to determine whether a proposed technology can be adjusted in order to meet concerns and detailed technical solutions to situations.
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beyond computational devices down to a lower layer in the hierarchy of machines to that of simpler devices and individual items (Krikorian and Gershenfeld, 2004). In order to facilitate this process, three areas need to be developed. Firstly, each of these items must be able to identify itself to other items and to the network in general. This is provided for by the introduction and development of RFID technology. Secondly, these items should include some element of embedded computational power in order to act with some level of intelligence. Thirdly, they will need to have some sense of their physical environment and geographical location. Continuing developments in computational science and electronics, particularly work on miniaturisation, tiny operating systems and wireless communication will make this vision increasingly realistic (International Telecommunication Union, 2005). The basic RFID system of transponder and interrogator is an important starting point in the process.
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digital cameras and printers), and higher bandwidth (telecommunication) devices through 4G cellular and WiMax (Cheekiralla and Engels, 2005).
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CONCLUSION
As a fledgling technology RFID is starting to make an impact on the core business of F&HE. Libraries are likely to initiate most of the activity over the next five years or so, but applications within administration and research are also likely to increase. It is, as yet, unclear to what extent RFID will impact on teaching and learning other than within specialist projects and it is probably more likely that these applications will develop alongside more general ubicomp developments. RFID has the potential to be a hugely significant technology within the ubicomp vision. However, the benefits of a pervasive computing environment are unlikely to be realised unless the technology can be trusted. Where that trust does not yet exist, or is likely to be undermined by problems that may arise as the consequence of ill-considered or malicious implementation of parts of the technological 'jigsaw', the ubicomp vision will also be negatively affected. The F&HE community cannot rely on the relative ease with which RFID has so far been implemented in the UK it is widely acknowledged that there are genuine concerns around the implementation of the technology and it would be wise for JISC to make good use of its position within the pan-European HE/ICT community to initiate a pro-active approach to developments that will impact positively on UK F&HE.
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