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AIM Global, the trade association for automatic identification and mobility, on Mar. 16 issued a statement in response to a technical paper delivered Mar. 15 at a conference in Pisa, Italy, entitled "Is Your Cat Infected with a Computer Virus?" The paper claims that RFID tags can be used to corrupt databases and even potentially to spread computer viruses. (Editor's Note: Click here to read the International Herald-Tribune article that reported on the technical paper and its conclusions.)
"Many of the basic assumptions in the paper overlook a number of fundamental design features necessary in automatic data collection systems and good database design," says AIM Global President Dan Mullen. "In other words, the researchers built a system with a weakness and then proceeded to show how the weakness could be exploited. Not surprisingly, poor system design, whether capturing RFID tag information, bar code information or keyboard-entered data will create vulnerabilities."
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AIM recognizes the efforts of the team from Vrije University and the academic community in general for bringing such issues forward, but the methodology of this particular research is questionable.
RFID scientists and experts from the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) were meeting in Kyoto, Japan this week with the leadership of the AIM Global RFID Experts Group as part of its ongoing effort to provide standards and implementation guidance in fielding RFID systems.
In response to this paper, these experts emphasize that there are two broad types of RFID tags, ones that have pre-encoded, or fixed data, and ones that have data that can be changed. Systems with fixed data such as those used to identify pets cannot be changed and therefore are immune to infection by a virus.
Here are a few specific attributes in RFID systems that can protect the overall system:
"Critical advancements in information processing and logistics made possible by RFID technology cannot be underestimated," concludes Mullen. "Corporations, government agencies and consumers will enjoy greater confidence when they select standardized RFID technology because the associated security issues have been addressed and resolved by the world's leading experts."
For more information on AIM Global, its technologies and its members, please visit www.aimglobal.org or www.rfid.org.
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