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InternetNews October 26, 2006 Roy Mark |
Most Countries Meet E-Passport Deadline Only three Visa Waiver Program countries failed to meet today's deadline for issuing electronic passports. |
InternetNews July 27, 2004 Roy Mark |
Biometric Passport Program Hits Snag Lack of chips and interoperability standards force one-year extension of biometric passport compliance. |
InternetNews August 21, 2006 Roy Mark |
Infineon Wins E-Passport Order German chipmaker Infineon is the winning bidder to supply security chips for the new U.S. e-passports, which the Department of State began issuing earlier this month. |
InternetNews June 22, 2005 Roy Mark |
E-Passport Progress Still Stymied? Lawmakers lashed out today at Bush administration officials for their latest delay in implementing biometric passports. |
InternetNews October 26, 2005 Tim Gray |
E-Passports Will be a Reality in 2006 Americans holding U.S. passports issued after October 2006 will carry embedded radio frequency identification (RFID) chips inside the documents, according to the U.S. State Department. |
CIO July 1, 2005 Thomas Wailgum |
Is Big Brother Coming to Your Wallet? Despite privacy worries, the march is on toward putting RFIDs in individuals' wallets, whether or not they want them. Whenever companies decide to deploy RFIDs containing personal data, CIOs will have to figure out what's going to be done with the data. |
InternetNews January 13, 2006 Roy Mark |
Biometric Passports Face Second Test E-passports now contain security features aimed at preventing 'skimming' of data embedded on chips. |
InternetNews December 3, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
EPassports Could Have Blocking Mechanism Late last week, the ACLU accused the U.S. government of rushing the rollout of insecure, RFID-enabled passports in hopes of creating a de facto global identification standard that could be used for surveillance. |
InternetNews June 15, 2004 Roy Mark |
Biometric Passports: Not Ready for Prime Time Department of Homeland Security and State Department seek two-year extension of deadline for machine-readable passports with biometric identifiers. |
InternetNews April 4, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Privacilla: RFID For Goods, Not People A conservative think tank came out against the U.S. proposal to place radio frequency identification (RFID) chips in all citizens' passports. |
InternetNews January 14, 2005 Roy Mark |
EPassport Awards More RFID Contracts The U.S. Government Printing Office has awarded four more contracts for sample RFID computer chips to be used in the 2006 launch of electronic passports. |
InternetNews October 25, 2006 Roy Mark |
Security is in the Vicinity The feds have a deal for you: a new passport card that some security experts are already criticizing. |
PC Magazine January 10, 2007 Seth Porges |
RFID Tags: Everywhere at Once RFID tags are showing up in everything from running shoes to passports. But are they making you safer or turning you into a target? |
Reason March 2005 Julian Sanchez |
No Passport to Privacy Travelers get chipped: In October the Government awarded contracts to produce a new generation of smart passports embedded with biometric RFID chips capable of transmitting data to readers dozens of feet away. |
InternetNews April 20, 2006 Roy Mark |
U.S. Completes E-Passport Testing DHS claims data on biometric passports will be secure... GAO reports feds still not sharing electronically stored terrorism-related info... USTR leaders trade for jobs... etc. |
Wired May 2006 Annalee Newitz |
The RFID Hacking Underground They can steal your smartcard, lift your passport, jack your car, even clone the chip in your arm. And you won't feel a thing. 5 tales from the RFID-hacking underground. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 Mark Anderson |
Quirks of RFID Memory Make for Cheap Security Scheme On-board SRAM produces unique chip fingerprint and random numbers needed for encryption |
InternetNews February 6, 2006 Susan Kuchinskas |
The New Chip-erati Are RFID implants geek-chic or a tool of the military industrial complex? |
PC World March 23, 2007 Erik Larkin |
New Credit Cards Leak Personal Info Some cards equipped with RFID chips send out names and account numbers. |
PC Magazine September 7, 2004 Karen Jones |
New Frontiers for RFID Tags Depending on how closely you guard your privacy, RFID is either a benevolent new technology or Big Brother waiting to pounce. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2007 Foster & Jaeger |
RFID Inside Maybe the ultimate solution, to allow accurate identification of individuals without some of the ethical issues raised by implanted radio chips, might require a different technology completely -- biometric scanners. |
InternetNews November 30, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
ACLU Issues Warning on RFID Passports The American Civil Liberties Union claims the U.S. government is rushing the rollout of insecure, RFID-enabled passports in hopes of creating a de facto global identification standard. |
PC World February 2005 Andrew Brandt |
Biometric Passports Fail Early Privacy Tests The federal Department of Homeland Security spent the past six months testing biometric passport prototypes and wants to roll out the new technology as soon as possible. |
InternetNews May 31, 2006 Roy Mark |
RFID as Big Brother? Please. A prominent Washington IT trade group is taking exception to a new government draft report raising privacy concerns over the use of RFID for human tracking. |
InternetNews July 17, 2006 David Needle |
HP's Tiny Chip Could Have Huge Impact HP's Labs unveiled a tiny, wireless chip today that could make audio and visual information as well as basic text information far more broadly accessible. |
The Motley Fool August 22, 2006 Tim Beyers |
Feds to Feed RFID to Travelers On Monday, German chipmaker Infineon reported that its chips featuring RFID technology would be used in several million U.S. passports. Investors, take note. |
Popular Mechanics January 2007 Joel Johnson |
RFID Credit Cards and Theft: Tech Clinic Bad news: Scammers can scan your new RFID-enhanced credit card from more than 2 ft. away. But is it any more vulnerable than a conventional credit card? |
Fast Company April 2013 Skylar Bergl |
Visa And MasterCard Add Encryption For RFID Fears As RFID chips rolled out in credit cards, steel wallet sales rose -- a response to fears of data theft. |
PC Magazine August 16, 2006 Natali Del Conte |
RFID's Future Competitor Hewlett-Packard has unveiled a speck of a chip that could usher in a slew of new applications. |
InternetNews January 20, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
RFID May See 'Explosive' Growth Although tiny in size, radio frequency identification tags expect huge growth over the next five years. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2006 Stephen Cass |
Better Safe Than Sorry This wallet is going to keep high-tech thieves at bay. |
InternetNews July 5, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
Broadcom's Secure RFID Chips Take Flight Chipmaker chipmaker Broadcom has announced what it called the first secure processor with embedded RFID capabilities. It's also the latest company to join RSA Security's SecurID Ready for Authenticators program. |
The Motley Fool October 14, 2004 Tom Taulli |
Tracking Us Applied Digital's human implantable RFID chip, VeriChip, was cleared by the Food and Drug Administration for medical uses in the U.S. On the news, the stock surged 68% to $3.57. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2007 Amal Graafstra |
Hands On How the author became one of the first do-it-yourselfers to have a radio-frequency identification (RFID) tag implanted under his skin and how it has changed his life. |
Chemistry World February 16, 2011 Harriet Brewerton |
Remote powered lab on a chip Wen Qiao at the University of California, San Diego, made a microfluidic chip that can be powered with a commercially available radio frequency transmitter for electrophoresis experiments. |
The Motley Fool October 17, 2007 Dan Bloom |
Broadcom Leaps Ahead Broadcom's new chip promises to sharply reduce the cost of advance mobile phones. |
InternetNews July 7, 2006 Erin Joyce |
The RFID Growth Conundrum Why isn't the FDA pushing harder for RFID to combat counterfeit drugs? The answer is not so simple. |
InternetNews April 30, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
California Crackdown on RFID A bill setting privacy standards for the tiny transponders has cleared the Senate. |
InternetNews February 28, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Coming Soon: The Credit Card Cell Phone Start-up ViVOTech wants to put your credit cards in your cell phone so you have a little less plastic to carry around. |
InternetNews May 2, 2007 Clint Boulton |
Microsoft, Intel Tagged For RFID Project Determined to lead the market for RFID products, Microsoft is teaming with Intel to offer business customers a platform that will enable RFID transactions on various devices. |
The Motley Fool February 20, 2007 Jack Uldrich |
Hitachi's RFID Takes a Powder Dust-sized RFID tag technology raises interesting possibilities. Is now the time for investors to buy in? Probably, but questions remain. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2008 Sally Adee |
The Hunt for the Kill Switch Are chip makers building electronic trapdoors in key military hardware? The Pentagon is making its biggest effort yet to find out |
InternetNews November 27, 2007 |
Toshiba, NEC Team on 32nm Chips Chip makers Toshiba and NEC Electronics said on Tuesday they would jointly develop 32-nanometer chips to better keep up with rivals. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2009 Guizzo & Santo |
The Runners-up: More Earthshaking Chips These 13 great little chips didn't make our list -- mainly because we ran out of space in print. And, well, one isn't even a chip |
InternetNews February 18, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
RFID is Inevitable But Dicey Burton Group says security and privacy concerns remain despite RFID momentum. |
Wired July 2004 Josh McHugh |
Attention, Shoppers: You Can Now Speed Straight Through Checkout Lines! Radio-frequency chips are retail nirvana. They're the end of privacy. They're the mark of the beast. Inside the tag-and-track supermarket of the future. |
Salon.com September 13, 2000 Katharine Mieszkowski |
A chip named Fido It's the American dream all over again -- Pet Chips are the new Pet Rocks. |
The Motley Fool August 30, 2004 Rich Duprey |
Profiting From Moore's Law Intel develops a new chip that roughly doubles the number of transistors on a chip. Whether it's in the chip makers themselves, or in the picks and shovels of the industry, investors stand to make big profits from tiny chips. |
Reason March 2009 Brian Doherty |
Follow Up: ID and Surveillance The techniques and practices for a universally tracked and databased America using RFID technology are out there and could be just five years away. |
PC Magazine July 13, 2004 Bill Machrone |
RFID: Dogs! Cats! Guitars? Radio-frequency identity tags are all around us. |