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  1. Proceedings of the 2005 ACM workshop on Privacy in the electronic society (WPES '05)
  2. Disabling RFID tags with visible confirmation: clipped tags are silenced
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The pynchon gate: a secure method of pseudonymous mail retrieval
Disabling RFID tags with visible confirmation: clipped tags are silenced
Quantitative evaluation of unlinkable ID matching schemes
Secure off-the-record messaging
Maintaining privacy on derived objects
Privacy for RFID through trusted computing
Coercion-resistant electronic elections
Peripheral privacy notifications for wireless networks
Protecting privacy in tabular healthcare data: explicit uncertainty for disclosure control
Specifying electronic voting protocols in typed MSR
Information revelation and privacy in online social networks
The privacy cost of the second-chance offer
Anonymous yet accountable access control
Determining user privacy preferences by asking the right questions: an automated approach
Mining rule semantics to understand legislative compliance

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Disabling RFID tags with visible confirmation: clipped tags are silenced

Content Provider ACM Digital Library
Author Moskowitz, Paul A. Karjoth, Günter
Abstract Existing solutions to protect consumer privacy in RFID either put the burden on the consumer or suffer from the very limited capabilities of today's RFID tags. We propose the use of physical RFID tag structures that permit a consumer to disable a tag by mechanically altering the tag in such a way that the ability of a reader to interrogate the RFID tag by wireless mean is inhibited. In "clipped tags", consumers can physically separate the body (chip) from the head (antenna) in an intuitive way. Such a separation provides visual confirmation that the tag has been deactivated. However, a physical contact channel may be used later to reactivate it. Such a reactivation would require deliberate actions on the part of the owner of the RFID tag to permit the reactivation to take place. Thus reactivation could not be undertaken without the owner's knowledge unless the item were either stolen or left unattended. This mechanism enables controlled reuse after purchase, making clipped tags superior to other RFID privacy-enhancing technologies.
Starting Page 27
Ending Page 30
Page Count 4
File Format PDF
ISBN 1595932283
DOI 10.1145/1102199.1102205
Language English
Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publisher Date 2005-11-07
Publisher Place New York
Access Restriction Subscribed
Subject Keyword Privacy Rfid
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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