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  1. Proceedings of the 4th ACM workshop on Wireless security (WiSe '05)
  2. Strengthening EPC tags against cloning
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Efficient key establishment for group-based wireless sensor deployments
A framework for MAC protocol misbehavior detection in wireless networks
Privacy enhanced cellular access security
Low-cost attacks against packet delivery, localization and time synchronization services in under-water sensor networks
The security of vehicular networks
Group-based key pre-distribution in wireless sensor networks
Hotspot-based traceback for mobile ad hoc networks
Strengthening EPC tags against cloning
Secure time synchronization service for sensor networks
Emergent properties in ad-hoc networks: a security perspective
Fully self-organized peer-to-peer key management for mobile ad hoc networks
Modeling epidemic spreading in mobile environments

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Strengthening EPC tags against cloning

Content Provider ACM Digital Library
Author Juels, Ari
Abstract The EPC (Electronic Product Code) tag is a form of RFID (Radio-Frequency IDentification) device that is emerging as a successor to the printed barcode. Like barcodes, EPC tags emit static codes that serve to identify and track shipping containers and individual objects. EPC tags, though, have a powerful benefit: they communicate in an automated, wireless manner.Some commercial segments, like the pharmaceutical industry, are coming to view EPC tags as a tool to combat counterfeiting. EPC tags are a potent mechanism for object identification, and can facilitate the compilation of detailed object histories and pedigrees. They are poor authenticators, though. EPC tags are vulnerable to elementary cloning and counterfeiting attacks.In this paper, we present simple techniques to strengthen the resistance of EPC tags against elementary cloning attacks. Our proposals are compliant with the EPCglobal Class-1 Generation-2 UHF standard for EPC tags, which is likely to predominate in supply chains. Such EPC tags contain PIN-based access-control and privacy enhancement mechanisms that are meant to enable tag authentication of readers during the transmission of sensitive commands (like the "kill" command). We show how to leverage such PINs to achieve the opposite goal, namely reader authentication of tags. We describe what may be viewed as crude challenge-response authentication protocols. These protocols do not defend against a full range of attacks, but still have significant practical application. Our techniques can strengthen EPC tags against cloning even in environments with untrusted reading devices.
Starting Page 67
Ending Page 76
Page Count 10
File Format PDF
ISBN 1595931422
DOI 10.1145/1080793.1080805
Language English
Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publisher Date 2005-09-02
Publisher Place New York
Access Restriction Subscribed
Subject Keyword Authentication Cloning Track and trace Epc Rfid Counterfeiting
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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