Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines   

NIST identifies RFID security threats

Jun 1, 2007 12:00 PM, By Mary Rose Roberts

That National Institute of Standards and Technology, or NIST, released a report that advises manufacturers, retailers, hospitals, federal agencies and other organizations that use radio frequency identification to evaluate security and privacy risks associated with the technology.

The report focuses on RFID applications for asset tracking and supply-chain management. Recommended practices for ensuring the RFID systems' security and privacy include firewalls, radio encryption, authentication, audit procedures and tag disposal and recycling procedures that permanently disable or destroy sensitive data.

Tom Karygiannis, senior researcher at the NIST's computer security division, said the report links several RFID applications to associated risks. For each risk, the report maps available technical, operational and management countermeasures.

“For most RFID technologies that are used in the supply chain, we give you a list of potential threats, and for each one we tell you how to mitigate it based on existing technology,” Karygiannis said.

Data privacy is a concern. For example, if U.S. military personnel are deploying to a war zone with RFID-tagged equipment, adversaries could tap into the data and determine the end-point location. In a warehouse environment, management may deploy a pallet or item-level tag. Karygiannis warns that third parties along the supply chain could access data on the RFID chips.

“In this case, you should put a limited amount of data on the tag,” he said. “In some situations, the information on the tag is simply a link to a database to where you can look up more information. This puts enterprises at risk.”

The report is free and available on the NIST Web site at www.nist.gov.

ONLINE SHOWCASE

Get vendor information in this special online showcase.

WHITE PAPERS

Download these new free public safety white papers from Motorola.

E-NEWSLETTERS

Check out our latest edition of Urgent Communications Today and Tech Talk. Not a subscriber? Subscribe now!

Hot Spots

Project 25

Interoperability

Rebanding

PSAP

Essential Reading

A corner turned

Let the buyer beware

When measurements aren't feasible

Verizon, AT&T both plan 2010 launch for LTE networks

Motorola shuffles the deck

Most Popular Articles

GAO report casts dark shadow on GPS

New York City's new broadband network could be model for first responders

Tower Shadowing: Friend and foe

A Big Voice in the Big Apple

Making Twitter work for public safety

Browse Back Issues