RSA Security Demonstrates New RFID Privacy Technology: The RSA(R) Blocker Tag
February 24 2004 - 8:10AM
PR Newswire (US)
RSA Security Demonstrates New RFID Privacy Technology: The RSA(R)
Blocker Tag "RxA Pharmacy" Demonstration Prescribes RSA(R) Blocker
Tag for Business Efficiency and Consumer Privacy SAN FRANCISCO,
RSA(R) CONFERENCE 2004, Feb. 24 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- RSA
Security Inc. today announced that it is demonstrating a prototype
of its RSA(R) Blocker Tag, a new technology designed to enforce
consumer privacy while allowing consumers and businesses to reap
the full benefits of Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID)
technology. The RSA Blocker Tag is a special RFID tag designed to
prevent readers from performing unwanted scanning and tracking of
people or goods, without any disruption to normal RFID operation.
Devised by RSA Laboratories, the researcharm of RSA Security, in
conjunction with Professor Ronald Rivest (the 'R' in RSA), the
patent-pending RSA Blocker Tag is one of several RFID innovations
under development at RSA Security, which is seeking to meet the
emerging security and privacy challenges of RFID. The demonstration
will take place at the RSA(R) Conference 2004 in booth #711. An
RFID tag is a small silicon microchip attached to an antenna that
emits a unique serial number via radio over short distances. It is
commonly viewed as a form of next-generation barcode poised to
sweep the world of commerce by cutting costs and yielding
unprecedented levels of supply chain efficiency. At the same time,
because information stored on RFID tags can be read by anyone, they
may pose privacy threats to customers when deployed in retail
environments, and have already triggered a wave of consumer outcry.
"In a naive, RFID-enabled world without technical forethought,
there is risk that sensitive information could be visible in secret
to anyone with an RFID reader," said Burt Kaliski, director and
chief scientist of RSA Laboratories. "Moreover, the unique serial
numbers emitted by RFID tags could be used to track people and
objects surreptitiously. For businesses too, RFID introduces new
privacy and security risks - and a whole new dimension to corporate
espionage. These concerns have motivated our scientists to work on
a new generation of technical solutions that match these
challenges." At RSA Security's booth, RSA Laboratories will be
demonstrating its prototype RSA Blocker Tag in a mock "RXA
Pharmacy." The RXA Pharmacy aims to show how live RFID tags on
medication bottles can help make prescription dispensing and
refills swift, easy and accurate for customers. At the same time,
if deployed without care, RFID tags can expose and jeopardize
consumer privacy and medical information. The RXA Pharmacy shows
how innovative solutions like the RSA(R) Blocker Tag can help
consumers and businesses achieve the best of both worlds with RFID:
privacy and convenience. Attendees entering the RXA Pharmacy fill
out mock prescription forms and select a "medication" type -
Wisdom, Tranquility or Happiness pills. These "medications"
(jellybeans) are provided in a prescription bottle bearing a RFID
tag. This serves a dual purpose of linking the RFID tag to a
specific customer record, and also recording that the bottle has
been purchased and therefore should not trigger theft-control
systems in the pharmacy. Upon checkout, RSA Laboratoriespharmacists
will provide attendees with special paper "blocker bags" for their
purchases. These bags carry a demonstration version of the RSA
Blocker Tag to help shield their contents from unwanted scanning
and secure consumers' private information. When a bottle is in the
blocker bag, it benefits from shielding against the RFID readers in
the RXA Pharmacy. When a bottle is removed from the blocker bag, it
may be successfully scanned to execute an easy and convenient
"prescription" refill. A fully developed RSA Blocker Tag will work
by "spamming" any RFID reader that attempts to scan tags without
the right authorization, thereby creating a hostile environment for
the reader. When ordinary RFID tags are in proximity to an RSA
Blocker Tag, they benefit from its shielding behavior; when the RSA
Blocker Tag is removed, the ordinary RFID tags may be used
normally. Thanks to its selective nature, the RSA Blocker Tag helps
prevent unwanted scanning of purchased items, but does not
interfere with the normal operation of RFID systems. "RSA Blocker
Tags cannot be used, for example, to circumvent theft-control
systems or mount denial-of-service attacks - only to protect the
privacy of law-abiding consumers," said Kaliski. The demonstration
version of the RSA Blocker Tag being presented this week at the RSA
Conference has the same effective functionality as the fully
developed version in general deployments, but is a software-based
solution designed just for the demonstration environment. The
RXAPharmacy demonstration is just one example of an environment in
which the RSA Blocker Tag might be used to help protect sensitive
information. And it is just one example of the new RFID privacy and
security technologies - for tags, readers and RFID backend
infrastructure - under development at RSA Laboratories and RSA
Security. As part of its RFID initiatives, RSA Security is a
founding member of EPCglobal Inc., the leading developer of RFID
standards, and a successor to the Auto-ID Center. EPCglobal is a
joint venture of Uniform Code Council (UCC) and EAN International,
the two bodies overseeing barcode standards in the U.S. and Europe
respectively. Many of the major companies intending to sell or
deploy RFID in the near future are members of this organization,
particularly in the United States. "The promise of RFID will
require infrastructure and process changes, and it will also
present huge security and privacy challenges," said Kaliski.
"Whereas retailers think about tracking inventory,piracy advocates
worry about what happens when the RFIDs leave the store. It's up to
companies like RSA Security to help bridge that gap. Combined with
conventional security technologies - authentication, authorization
and encryption - and if suitably supported by standards, reader
manufacturers, and auditing processes, this new patent-protected
approach of the RSA Blocker Tag is a viable mechanism for
protecting sensitive business data and consumer privacy."
Availability The RSA Blocker Tag is only a research concept at
present. It is RSA Security's opinion that RFID tags are unlikely
to become widespread in individual retail items for at least
several years. When they do, RSA Blocker Tags are one of a
collection of innovative technical protections for consumer
privacy. For more information on RFID innovations at RSA Security
Inc, please visit http://www.rsasecurity.com/go/rfid. About RSA
Security Inc. RSA Security Inc. helps organizations protect private
information and manage the identities of people and applications
accessing and exchanging that information. RSA Security's portfolio
of solutions - including identity & access management, secure
mobile & remote access, secure enterprise access and secure
transactions - are all designed to provide the most seamless
e-security experience in the market. Our strong reputation is built
on our history of ingenuity, leadership, proven technologies and
our more than 14,000 customers around the globe. Together with more
than 1,000 technology and integration partners, RSA Security
inspires confidence in everyone to experience the power and promise
of the Internet. For more information, please visit
http://www.rsasecurity.com/. RSA is either a registered trademark
or trademark of RSA Security Inc. in the United States and/or other
countries. All other products and services mentioned are trademarks
of their respective companies. For more information: Roger Fortier
or Amy Barney McGrath/Power Public Relations (408) 727-0351 Tim
Powers RSA Security Inc. (781) 515-6212 DATASOURCE: RSA Security
Inc. CONTACT: Roger Fortier, , or Amy Barney, of McGrath/Power
Public Relations, +1-408-727-0351; or Tim Powers, RSA Security
Inc., +1-781-515-6212, Web site: http://www.rsasecurity.com/
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