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Reason March 2005 Julian Sanchez |
No Passport to Privacy Travelers get chipped: In October the Government awarded contracts to produce a new generation of smart passports embedded with biometric RFID chips capable of transmitting data to readers dozens of feet away. |
PC World March 23, 2007 Erik Larkin |
New Credit Cards Leak Personal Info Some cards equipped with RFID chips send out names and account numbers. |
Fast Company April 2013 Skylar Bergl |
Visa And MasterCard Add Encryption For RFID Fears As RFID chips rolled out in credit cards, steel wallet sales rose -- a response to fears of data theft. |
PC Magazine January 10, 2007 Seth Porges |
RFID Tags: Everywhere at Once RFID tags are showing up in everything from running shoes to passports. But are they making you safer or turning you into a target? |
CIO July 1, 2005 Thomas Wailgum |
Is Big Brother Coming to Your Wallet? Despite privacy worries, the march is on toward putting RFIDs in individuals' wallets, whether or not they want them. Whenever companies decide to deploy RFIDs containing personal data, CIOs will have to figure out what's going to be done with the data. |
AskMen.com |
Front-Pocket Wallets Here are 10 sleek wallets that will fit in your front pocket. |
PC Magazine October 28, 2003 |
The Lookout: A Fix for RFID Researchers at RSA Security's lab have come up with a technique they say will eliminate many of the privacy concerns surrounding the use of RFID (radio frequency identification) tags. |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2009 David Blanchard |
A New Generation of RFID The third generation of active RFID is the the Ubiquitous Sensor Network (USN), which is sometimes referred to as the Wireless Sensor Network (WSN). |
Popular Mechanics January 2007 Joel Johnson |
RFID Credit Cards and Theft: Tech Clinic Bad news: Scammers can scan your new RFID-enhanced credit card from more than 2 ft. away. But is it any more vulnerable than a conventional credit card? |
PC World July 2003 Andrew Brandt |
Privacy Watch: Tracked by the Shirt on Your Back? Radio frequency technology has the potential to identify us all. |
InternetNews December 1, 2006 Erin Joyce |
Katherine Albrecht, Privacy Group CASPIAN It's not as though the privacy group wants RFID banned outright. It just doesn't want to become unwitting market research subjects. Is Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering becoming the soul of RFID? |
The Motley Fool September 10, 2004 Selena Maranjian |
Lost Wallet, No Big Deal A little precaution can let you shrug off a stolen or lost wallet. |
Popular Mechanics January 2007 |
Upgrade Wish List: Scanner-Proof Wallet The Datasafe Wallet prevents radio frequency identification (RFID) chips on cards from getting scanned. |
InternetNews January 20, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
RFID May See 'Explosive' Growth Although tiny in size, radio frequency identification tags expect huge growth over the next five years. |
PC Magazine November 5, 2003 |
RFID: Promise and Peril If you're wearing or carrying anything with an embedded RFID tag, you could conceivably be tracked wherever you go. |
InternetNews October 23, 2006 Roy Mark |
U.S. E-Passports Hitting Market Four years in the making, RFID-embedded passports meeting milestones. |
PC Magazine September 7, 2004 Karen Jones |
New Frontiers for RFID Tags Depending on how closely you guard your privacy, RFID is either a benevolent new technology or Big Brother waiting to pounce. |
CFO September 1, 2004 John Goff |
Dude, Where's My Printer? RFID technology may someday revolutionize how companies track their products. But problems still lie ahead in adopting workable systems. |
The Motley Fool February 20, 2007 Jack Uldrich |
Hitachi's RFID Takes a Powder Dust-sized RFID tag technology raises interesting possibilities. Is now the time for investors to buy in? Probably, but questions remain. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2008 Sandra Upson |
RFID Systems May Disrupt the Function of Medical Devices Researchers ask whether hospitals should adopt new guidelines for medical electronics' interoperability. |
InternetNews January 12, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
RFID Tags a Booming Biz Research firm In-Stat says RFID tags will become the most far-reaching wireless technology since the cell phone, reaching $2.8 billion in four years. |
Food Processing January 2005 Judy Rice |
RFID on your package: No pain, no gain? Implementation of radio frequency identification technology isn't as simple as just slapping an RFID tag on a shipping case or pallet. Here are the critical considerations before implementing this technology ... and some available outside help. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2007 Foster & Jaeger |
RFID Inside Maybe the ultimate solution, to allow accurate identification of individuals without some of the ethical issues raised by implanted radio chips, might require a different technology completely -- biometric scanners. |
Entrepreneur May 2007 Amanda C. Kooser |
Tag, You're It You can be RFID-compliant, even on a tight budget. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics April 2008 |
RFID Market Grew to $5 Billion in 2007 The value of the radio frequency identification (RFID) market grew strongly in 2007, mainly powered by a peak in deliveries of the Chinese national ID card. |
InternetNews February 25, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
A Baby Step For RFID Privacy RSA Security has announced that it's working on RSA Blocker Tag, an anti-radio frequency identification technology. The proposed tag is designed to prevent readers from accurately scanning tags on goods and reading their electronic product codes, or EPCs. |
IndustryWeek September 22, 2010 |
No Slowdown for RFID Roughly 2.3 billion RFID tags will be sold in 2010, up from 1.9 billion in 2009. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 Mark Anderson |
Quirks of RFID Memory Make for Cheap Security Scheme On-board SRAM produces unique chip fingerprint and random numbers needed for encryption |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2006 Jonathan Katz |
Making RFID Work Without cost sharing, rewards from RFID remain limited. |
InternetNews October 26, 2005 Tim Gray |
E-Passports Will be a Reality in 2006 Americans holding U.S. passports issued after October 2006 will carry embedded radio frequency identification (RFID) chips inside the documents, according to the U.S. State Department. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2005 Alexander Hellemans |
Could Belgian Diode Lead to Printable RFIDs? A team of researchers in Belgium are developing printable RFID tags which can reach higher frequencies. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2007 Amal Graafstra |
Hands On How the author became one of the first do-it-yourselfers to have a radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag implanted under his skin and how it has changed his life. |
Information Today August 16, 2010 |
Convert to RFID Tags With Tech Logic's uTagIT The uTagIT system provides the convenience and ease of use to encode barcode numbers onto RFID tags. |
InternetNews November 30, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
ACLU Issues Warning on RFID Passports The American Civil Liberties Union claims the U.S. government is rushing the rollout of insecure, RFID-enabled passports in hopes of creating a de facto global identification standard. |
The Motley Fool February 14, 2006 Tim Beyers |
Security Gets the RFID Treatment The soon-to-go-public VeriChip makes implantable RFID devices. Chilling, you say? Even so, RFID remains big business with growth estimated to top $26 billion by 2015, up from just under $2 billion in 2005. |
BusinessWeek September 29, 2003 |
Sanjay Sarma: Mighty Smart Labels The MIT researcher says radio-frequency ID tags are almost here -- and their uses will be mind-blowing, perhaps lifesaving. |
Wired May 2006 Annalee Newitz |
The RFID Hacking Underground They can steal your smartcard, lift your passport, jack your car, even clone the chip in your arm. And you won't feel a thing. 5 tales from the RFID-hacking underground. |
Food Processing January 2005 Jack Neff |
RFID: Track and (t)race The key for most companies to get ready for RFID isn't necessarily to hop on the bandwagon, but to re-examine another industry supply chain issue -- data synchronization. |
PC Magazine April 4, 2007 John C. Dvorak |
Inside Track v26n09 Hybrid hard drives (HHDs)... RFID hackers... Apple iPhone... Bluetooth version of Jawbone earpieces... |
HBS Working Knowledge February 2, 2004 Sean Silverthorne |
RFID: The Promise (and Danger) of Smart Barcodes Thanks to Wal-Mart, we all have heard about radio frequency identification. Now RFID tags are set to pop up on everything from razor blades to cattle. |
InternetNews October 25, 2006 Roy Mark |
Security is in the Vicinity The feds have a deal for you: a new passport card that some security experts are already criticizing. |
The Motley Fool June 16, 2007 Elizabeth Brokamp |
What to Do When You Lose Your Wallet If your wallet vanishes, save time and money by knowing what to do. |
PC Magazine July 13, 2004 Alan Cohen |
No Where To Hide The average American is listed in at least 50 databases, and that's not counting government files. Do you know what's in your cyber dossier? |
AskMen.com Jasper Anson |
How To: Recover From A Lost Wallet Here's how to recover from a lost wallet in case you do indeed suffer from an absent piece of your identity. |
AskMen.com March 12, 2003 Steve Richer |
How To: Avoid Identity Theft Criminals steal identities to commit all kinds of fraud and hide the misdeeds they commit. In 2001, there were more than 86,000 victims of this crime in the United States; that figure almost doubled to 162,000 in 2002. Read on to learn how to avoid being the next victim. |
AskMen.com December 5, 2001 Karin Eldor |
Get Your Hands On Men's Wallets & Bags As a businessman, you want your whole image to exude success and style; from the shoes you're wearing and the bag in your hand, to the wallet you use to give associates your business card... |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Khermouch & Green |
Bar Codes Better Watch Their Backs New retail technologies have a way of lingering in dreamland until discount colossus Wal-Mart decides it's time for everyone to wake up. The alarm clock in Bentonville, Ark., just went off again, this time for a successor to bar codes called Radio Frequency Identification. |
AskMen.com Farah Averill |
2007 Wallets No matter what your lifestyle, our suggestions run the gamut from sporty to clubbing to business, so you can be sure you'll find a wallet that fits the bill. |
The Motley Fool January 3, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
RFID Signal Strong in 2005 Radio Frequency Identification technology is going to ring in the new year in more ways than one. Think you should follow suit as an investor? |
CIO December 1, 2003 Meridith Levinson |
The RFID Imperative The adoption of RFID technology is inevitable. Its transformational promise, huge. But the success of RFID in your business depends on your infrastructure. Here's what you need to add to your holiday to-do list |