A Technical RFID Primer 131
gManZboy writes "Roy Want, principal engineer at Intel Research, has a pretty meaty technical overview of RFID up at Queue. If you ever wondered how these little things actually work it's worth a read. For instance, I was intrigued to find out how the tags (which are generally battery-free) can absorb enough energy from RFID readers to then power up and transmit their own signal back to the reader."
I think the public needs to know... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I think the public needs to know... (Score:2)
I don't know, I'd say there can't be much more than a tiny spec of silicon in a RFID tag, so once it's discarded, it can just be considered an all-natural grain of sand...
Re:I think the public needs to know... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I think the public needs to know... (Score:1)
ADSX makes RFID's (Score:1)
"A computer chip that is implanted under the skin won U.S. approval on Wednesday for use in helping doctors quickly access a patient's medical history.
The VeriChip, sold by Applied Digital Solutions Inc., is placed in the upper arm in a painless procedure that takes minutes, the company said."
Re:I think the public needs to know... (Score:1)
page 2 (Score:1)
Operating Principles
Passive tags that operate at frequencies up to 100 MHz are usually powered by magnetic induction, the same principle that drives the operation of household transformers. An alternating current in the reader coil induces a current in the tag's antenna coil, allowing charge to be stored in a capacitor, which then can be used to power the tag electronics. Information in the tag is sent back to the reader by loading the tag's coil in a changing pattern over time, which affects t
page 3 (Score:1)
EXTENDING RFID APPLICATIONS: SENSORS, SECURITY, AND MEMORY
RFID provides a data transport mechanism between a tag and a reader, which can be extended to provide greater utility than returning a simple identification number. The three important extensions of electronic tagging are: sensing the environment, security, and electronic memory.
Sensors
The addition of a physical sensor to a tag has been an important development, providing the capability for a storeowner to learn something about the c
page 4/5 (Score:1)
Reader Coordination and Signal Processing
Most RFID readers are not designed to operate in the presence of another reader that is also scanning for tags. To date, this has not been a significant problem, as RFID has been in limited deployment without much opportunity for readers to interfere with each other. As electronic tags become more common, however, readers will be deployed on a larger scale, effectively garbling the data for systems in proximity to each other. This problem will become particul
Please Don't Steal Our Content (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd like more info, actually (Score:4, Interesting)
The most obvious security risk is that someone steals a tag and enters the premises unnoticed. But there are others that I worry about. Stuff like the ease of replicating an RFID tag or even a hacker passively reading a tag in public then recreating it and gaining access.
I understand the problems many people have with RFID, especially stuff like tracking of purchased items and the like, but I'm more interested in using it for security clearances. Unfortunately, the web is not full of information about this (whereas it is full of information about how RFID is a privacy threat). More information about the practical uses of RFID would be greatly desired.
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm assuming you'd let the engineers out of the office when the fire alarm was going off, otherwise you'd probably be looking at quite a jail term.
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:3, Informative)
I'm assuming you'd let the engineers out of the office when the fire alarm was going off, otherwise you'd probably be looking at quite a jail term.
Every facility I have worked at with card readers on doors have crash bars and a door alarm, so that if you exit without swiping your card the alarm goes off. If there is a fire, nobody really cares about a door alarm.
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:2)
The security system communicated with the alarm system, to disable all locks whenever the alarm sounded.
S
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:1)
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:2)
The most obvious security risk is that someone steals a tag and enters the premises unnoticed. But there are others that I worry about. Stuff like the ease of replicating an RFID tag or even a hacker passively reading a tag in public then recreating it and gaining access.
RFID in conjunction with pin numbers addresses stuff like that.
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:2)
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:4, Informative)
There are some spec's on the standards. Google search for ISO15693. That covers near field tags operating on 13.56 MHZ.
Search for EPC-96 standard for the far field 915 MHZ tags.
Most tags are either read only with a unique ID number, or read/write, also with a non-alterable unique ID number. Some, but not all tags can be told to become de-activated. So yes, an eraser signal could be used against some tags. A huge surge of RF could simply fry them also. Tossing them in a microwave oven comes to mind..
Since the tags have collision avoidance, an unscrupulous individual could make an emitter that chattered garbage. With that, items with active tags could be taken past readers without being read as they wouldn't be heard in the chatter.
There is mention of RFID jammers. Do a Google search again. Google is your friend.
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:2)
Like someone else mentioned, you don't want to make it difficult to leave the area in case of emergency.
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.lenel.com/ [lenel.com]
http://www.ti.com/tiris/docs/products/readers/RI-H 4R-S5H3.shtml [ti.com]
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:3, Informative)
If would be easy enough to have the RFID readers ONLY within the building and give the engineers/manag^H^H^H^H^H^H/security/cleaning staff access to a sensitive lab, maybe. That way even if someone does manage to clone the tag while the engineer is in the street, they can't get in the building using just the cloned tag. If someone
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:1)
Helix_r also has the right idea about combining a pin code with the tag, in our most secure locations we require card, pin, and bio (RSI hand scan). Something you hav
We have it at our office (Score:3, Interesting)
Before this we had swipe cards. Now all we have to do is walk up to the door and the door reader will go beep and open the lock.
I have been trying to open it up to take a look but it's complete sealed. I have been told it's water proof, heat proof and so on. It's labelled by a company called Sonitrol. Their website is at http://www.sonitrol.com/ but it doesn't show any actual pr
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:1)
Some RFID protocols are more secure than others. We use cards with the XSF protocol, which according to our vendor is one of the more secure.
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:1)
For example, access to your bank account via ATM requires something physical (your card) and something only you should know (your pin number).
A lot of people beleive that biometrics will answer everything, but secure systems will still require information that only the holder should know. Reason being is that your eyeball can be removed and so can your finger.
So, if you used RFID then you would still require so
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:1)
Ahh yes, the good ol' Personal Identification Number number. But seriously...
If someone has decided that they're willing to remove your eyeball or finger in order to gain access to a facility, chances are that they would get the average person to reveal whatever password they know after the removal of a few more fingers (or the t
Re:I'd like more info, actually (Score:1)
Sure (Score:4, Funny)
Tinfoil ON!. Everyone knows they get there energy from stealing your soul a little at a time, sucking the very life essence from your body. Then when they have all your energy they march you into a retirement home which is just a block away from the new universal nutrient - soylent green! Tinfoil OFF!
Re:Sure (Score:1, Funny)
And remember, you needn't avoid women, but you must deny them your essence.
-Peter
Re:Sure (Score:2)
Wouldn't they get more energy from thrash metal?
RFID isn't a problem-free technology for retailers (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah, thanks alot jackass - THINK PLEASE. (Score:3, Interesting)
If you're paranoid that the FBI is tracking you and your chiuaua, then start microwaving all your jeans at home, or go live in a cabin for all I care. But please *do not* inconvience me while I am alr
Re:Yeah, thanks alot jackass - THINK PLEASE. (Score:2)
Don't rail at the paranoids. Profit from them!
Isn't that the idea? (Score:2)
Meanwhile, take a couple of xanax and shop someplace else besides Wal Mart.
You are missing the point (Score:2)
No one wants to track shit all with it once it leaves the store. Do you really think Wal-mart is going to share its RFID database with Target so that Target will know what you bought there when you walk in? No - so how the hell is anyone going to track anyone with it?
Answer - they
Re:You are missing the point (Score:1)
However, it occurred to me that they may want to track you upon re-entering the store. No, not everything that was ever bought there (probably). Rather, items that managed to make it out the front door without being paid for. Imagine the look on Joe Shoplifter's face when he is greeted by the police while shopping and taken for a little ride downtown, all because he happened to wear his stolen boots back into the store.
ARRRGGGHHh (Score:2)
a) Any clothing item's RFIDs would be zapped in the dryer, or when you rub your feet on the carpet and make a spark, or a billion other potential ways.
b) Any criminals/paranoids can zap any potentiall still-working tags using a common microwave, so their value as a re-entry tracer is ***USELESS***.
c) The tags are not going to be sewn into the clothes for christ sake. You think that see-through blouse your GF owns can have a tag with metal in it without it itching her? Or even the shirt you
Re:RFID isn't a problem-free technology for retail (Score:5, Insightful)
Ooo! A store can track my purchases up to 10 feet beyond their door! Wow! I better call Secret Squirrel for some countermeasure tips!
And of course it had the old idea of an ubergovernment plan of having sensors in every toilet seat and lamp post so that they can track how often I change my underwear.
Honestly, people... The X-Files is over, and our government can't keep Chechnyan rebels from crossing in from Mexico. They can't even prevent the vast waste and fraud perpetrated by the uneducated masses against the various money giveaway programs.
So they're suddenly get their act together and implement a shiny, sparkly supersensor array in order to track which communist manifesto you bought this week down at the Chairman Meow Bookshop/Animal Companion Emporium?
Regardless of how much a retailer's internal facility might disrupt their ability to monitor me, I still plan on getting one of RSA's RFID jammers when they're out.
Huh. Interesting. Do any descendants of P. T. Barnum work at RSA? I think you'd be better served by an orgone energy accumulator.
Re:RFID isn't a problem-free technology for retail (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't know about you, but I'm pretty anti-marketing myself. The idea of "minority report" style marketing makes me want to puke. The idea that someone not only knows the manufacturer and model of my shirt, but whether or not I'm wearing boxers or briefs gives me the ebee-jeebies. It would also give muggers a priceless resource for picking victims. It wont take very long for public databases of RFID tags to manufactureres to start appearing. A few RFID scanners for the public are also already available.
10 feet is plenty of space on most streets, restaraunts or bars to find out if someone is worth mugging. Even more if people start making out of spec scanners that put out more power to get a stronger (longer range) return signal. Now, all that being said, I'm not oppposed to RFID at all, I think it has excellent potential. The problem is that RFID tags are being expressly designed directly into future products to prevent you from removing a tag without damaging or destroying the product.
Re:RFID isn't a problem-free technology for retail (Score:3, Interesting)
I wasn't. That was a joke. I thought "Chairman Meow" sort of tagged it as such. That was the name of a cat P. J. O'Rourke once owned, BTW.
10 feet is plenty of space on most streets, restaraunts or bars to find out if someone is worth mugging.
I just don't think anyone is going to bother. Common criminals have lots to go high tech with now, and the most sophisticated thing they tend to use is a cell phone. Lead pipes and boomsticks are still the tools of choice. There are plenty o
Re:RFID isn't a problem-free technology for retail (Score:1, Interesting)
They use more than that. Read the November issue of Popular Science. Page 88.
Re:RFID isn't a problem-free technology for retail (Score:3, Insightful)
Wow, are you really that clueless? You sound like the perfect target for marketers: you'll believe what they say without question.
Who says only stores can detect your RFID's? Anybody will be able to buy a reader. That means anywhere you go, you can be identified remotely, and all your posessions you are carrying/wearing can be identified without your knowledge.
Maybe you don't care if people know you're carrying a $3000 laptop and wearing a $600 Rolex and $1000 shoes. Maybe you don't even care that the
Re:RFID isn't a problem-free technology for retail (Score:2)
[bunch of tired old stale strawman arguments snipped]
It's such a short leap to other illegitimate uses for RFID's that I can't believe you are so blind as to not see them.
OK, dumbass from the fifth level of Hell, let's get this straight. I said I didn't think street criminal would BOTHER with this stuff. That was my whole point: they CAN, but WILL they?
And your examples prove my point. They don't need an RFID reader to tell if I have a $3000 laptop, $600 Rolex or $1000 shoes. They can use that old sc
"Bugs" come full circle (Score:1)
The more things change, the more they stay the same http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_bug [wikipedia.org]
errrm.... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:errrm.... (Score:4)
Re:errrm.... (Score:4, Informative)
This is called Passive RFID. There is also Active RFID, where the tag has its own power source.
Active RFID is more expensive, because of the need for a power source, but it gets much better range than the ~10 feet (with an antenna that will cook you under perfect conditions) you can get with a passive tag.
Person-tracking RFID systems are the sorts of things that would use an active tag; you need greater range, and the tagged item has a much higher value than, say, a can of soup, so it's worth the extra cost.
As for the dream/nightmare of passive tags tracking people's purchase as they walk from store to store, I have enough trouble getting six tags placed directly onto an antenna powerful enough to make you feel warm if you stand next to it to get read; it's highly bloody unlikely that someone or some company with an antenna ten feet away is going to surreptitiously record your purchases without your knowledge. Don't believe the RFID industry's hype.
Microwaves ? (Score:1)
No they won't work (Score:3, Interesting)
This is why all these privacy nuts are just uninformed wackos.
Er.... (Score:2)
Fact 2 - If you are SO WORRIED about a tag in your passport, nuke it for 30 seconds. Same with everything else you just described. If it is against the law to do so, I woudl suggest writing your congressperson/governor rather than ranting like a lunatic on slashdot, it will do much more good.
Old Tech hinted of this. (Score:5, Interesting)
In fact, various forms of crude RFID have been used since World War II.
What I think he is refering to but failing to mention by name is the aircraft friend or foe reflector. A tuned cavity was placed on an air craft that would reflect a radar signal many times inside the cavity then emit it back. This delay produced a second reflection to a radar scan. If the shadow image of the plane was on the display, it was a Friend. If it was absent, it was a Foe. It was known as a FOF transponder. (Friend Or Foe)
It has been upgraded to return the plane identification.
Re:Old Tech hinted of this. (Score:2)
http://www.dean-boys.com/extras/iff/iffqa.html
A snip from the article mentions the first system that simply delayed and returned the original radar signal. This produced 2 blips. One of the plane and one behind it from the delayed reflection.
Snip
Wow (Score:3, Funny)
Redundancy check completed !
Who submitted this crap (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Who submitted this crap (Score:2)
The article was written by Roy Want [intel.com]. I seriously doubt if a principle engineer at Intel, with a PhD from Cambridge, is that worried about promoting a short article on a minor website.
Re:Who submitted this crap (Score:1, Insightful)
In My Books & Records (Score:1)
Re:In My Books & Records (Score:2)
Scan the barcodes. Eg with http://www.collectorz.com/book/ [collectorz.com]. I keep meaning to have a go at this for my books, but doing my CDs used up this decade's allocation of can be arsedness.
Lest we forget... (Score:3, Insightful)
You first heard it from me.
More info in the RFID handbook (Score:2)
RFID Technology? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't mean to be argumentative, but are you serious? This was the first time you had heard about this? I thought this was the fundamental feature for RFID--the idea that the tag doesn't require any kind of battery or other external power supply.
It scares me that on a technical site like slashdot the submitter is much more likely to know every privacy concern about RFID, yet know very little about the underlying technology. Isn't it supposed to be the other way around? When did "Your rights online" trump technical information on slashdot?
Re:RFID Technology? (Score:2)
Re:RFID Technology? (Score:2)
Re:RFID Technology? (Score:2)
I thought the features of RFID were that they could hold as much or more info than a bar code at about the same cost without the limitation of the bar code -- dependance on line of sight for data transmission. Its pretty handy to be able to inventory an entire w
Not complete enough ... (Score:4, Interesting)
For a complete developers guide you can check EM Microelectronic-Marin SA Application Note [emmicroelectronic.com]
However for and introduction, check Wikipedia [wikipedia.org], or if you just want to start play with it, take a look at some [rfidinc.com] RFID [engidesa.com] readers [skyetek.com].
Low power is not new! (Score:5, Interesting)
The passive devices that power up and send back data have nothing on the crystal radios that were used during the 1930's and 1940's. With nothing but an antenna a few feet or yards long,a semiconductor(crystal) and earphones, it was possible to receive enough power to hear radio stations. The so called "Fox Hole Radio" of World War II used a pin made of tin and to contact a "Blue Blade" razor to make the crystal. This simple setup received enough power from the antenna to give audible power to the earphones. I duplicated this years later but used a 1N34 germanium crystal. (And no, you don't need a tuning circuit if you have one strong signal and the others are weak.) The blue blade razors were out of production before I knew that they could be used.
Re:Low power is not new! (Score:2)
Want it really loud? Pick up the phone. Turn on the TV. It took multiple calls to the FCC to get that station to turn its power down. Eventually though the station went broke and came back as someone knew, who again cranked up the power.
Re:Low power is not new! (Score:1)
transmission vs. reflection and foil bags (Score:5, Informative)
I was intrigued to find out how the tags (which are generally battery-free) can absorb enough energy from RFID readers to then power up and transmit their own signal back to the reader."
The high frequency tags don't actually transmit. They change the impedance of their antenna to modulate the reflection back to the transmitter.
Another problem the article didn't mention is that bags lined with aluminum or copper foil will thwart these systems.
Re:transmission vs. reflection and foil bags (Score:2, Funny)
Ha suckers! I knew my hat worked!
Lukas Grunwald's Blackhat pres. + Linux tools! (Score:5, Informative)
The most interesting thing that I learned was that most all RFID tags have a 128 byte "user data" buffer than can be read or written by ANY RFID gate. (Ie: you can put an RFID interface on your laptop and query the tags and change the "user data" portion on them.)
Obviously, this means that any application that is sensitive to tampering should only use the hard-coded serial numbers, not the "user data" area... but history has told us how well people stick to "common sense" security practices in their implementations.
His paper and the Linux tool that allows you to query and change the data are located here: http://www.blackhat.com/html/bh-media-archives/bh- archives-2004.html [blackhat.com] (scroll down to Lukas Grunwald under "Layer 0".
Re:Lukas Grunwald's Blackhat pres. + Linux tools! (Score:2)
I just see all kinds of problems in the nuisance arena. Wardriving for RFID's sounds like what the script kiddies will be up to in a few years.
not so new? (Score:2)
Those have been around for quite a while, and you might consider them RF tags too, right?
Speaking of those, how do those stickers work? Do they generate some kind of signature back-EMF in the detection coils? I've always wondered this -- and how is it they can be activated, deactivated, repeatedly? (like for a library)
Re:not so new? (Score:1, Informative)
see : http://w4.siemens.de/FuI/en/archiv/zeitschrift/he
Funny (Score:1)
i refuse!
I know how it works. (Score:2)
It's magic.
-Arthur C. Clarke
Is metal really a problem? (Score:3, Interesting)
The article states, that metal containers (say, a can of coke) and RFID tags don't match well. Is this really true? What if the RFID tag's antenna connects to the metal? Wouldn't the metal become a bigger antenna, thus increasing the range?
Re:Is metal really a problem? (Score:2)
As someone who developed it into a product... (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, it is true, there is a blast of energy (usually at a really low wave length - around 100Khz to 180Khz - they aren't very well tuned despite the lit).
For the paranoid, chewing gum wrappers do a good job of blocking them. Actually, a lot of tinted windshields do a good job as well (they tend to contain metal, typically iron from what I am told).
Interference is a big factor with these guys. A noisy engine (spark plugs badly gapped?) can cause problems. But the end result was that the company bought it.
Do I fear the use of it? Not really. But at the same time I don't like them used without my permission. As any device that is used to "track", it needs to have my consent.
That said, they are kinda' cool.
Re:As someone who developed it into a product... (Score:4, Interesting)
For those that didn's bother the read the article, i'll quickly try to explain how it works.(yes, IAAEE, I Am An Electrical Engineer).
Basicly a RFID scanner works by transmitting a certain frequency (125Khz is very common). The tag has a L/C (coil-capacitor) ciruit tuned to this frequency. It uses energy from the circuit to power a tiny circuit (that's how it can work without a battery), which will then send it's stored code. It sends the information back to the scanner by effectively shorting out it's receiver circuit. Doing so drains more energy from the transmitter circuit on the scanner, which can be measured and so the code that the tag send can be decoded.
Now a couple of ideas on how to block it:
- block the scanner by transmitting the same frequency at a highly varying output level. This makes it effectively impossible to measure the tag shorting out it's receiver circuit, because of the heavy fluctuation in the field strength.
- use a microcontroller to send random codes. If enough people do this, the database will get stuffed with false information and will eventually be useless.
- fry the tags in your stuff, EMP-style. I think it would be possible to break the little circuit by placing the tag inside the transmitter coil of a powerfull (but very simple) oscillator running at 125kHz.
Some add on... (Score:4, Informative)
-The energy sent BACK is very weak. So you really don't need much to block it. White noise around 125 Khz should be enough. Or, as I mentioned before, chewing gum wrapper. Take your pick.
-Random codes won't do it. Sorry, but there IS a check (pretty pitiful, but there is one) and if the checksum don't match, nothing goes through. Nothing gets stuffed. Most readers use 8051 or something lightweight. If it doesn't pass first base, it doesn't go no where.
-Pliers work real good at breaking them. Easier than EMP (which might be noticed). They also break pretty easily on their own.
Re:Some add on... (Score:3, Informative)
Well, ofcourse, that's the idea. Just build a simple 125 kHz oscillator (say, run a schmitt trigger at 125 square wave and use a simple second order bandpassfilter to filter out some unwanted harmonics), and connect it to a simple, tuned antenna. That would be pretty effective at blocking all RFID tag readers using that f
Re:Some add on... (Score:2)
- Smaller the tag, the smaller the squeak. Remember, energy dissipate at a
Re:As someone who developed it into a product... (Score:2)
Remote Control Sans Batteries (Score:2, Interesting)
Also, a longstanding dream of mine is the wireless light switch. It could signal back its state to to an EM transponder in each room. Light switches would then be affixed to walls with blu-tack or whatever. This sounds kin
Re:Remote Control Sans Batteries (Score:2)
And here I am thinking... (Score:2)
A lesson for you people: it's not the end of the world.
Re:Hmmm... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:fuck rfid. (Score:3, Funny)
that's no joke! (Score:1)
That's no joke. Check out "the world's smallest RFID" [hitachi.co.jp]
My little conspiracy theory... (Score:1)
Re:OT: Turds (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Cost? (Score:1)
The two uses are unique identification, of individual units, or identification of a product. This is the same as the EAN 13 and EAN 128 usage.
So you can use it to identify that you have a pack of Hubba Bubba Strawberry, or you can use it to determine that you have a carton of T-Bones produced at the Rangi Plant by Affco Meats in New Zealand, and that the unique serial number is 10000028374.
The cost for both varies, as it changes what you have to do to do