RFID Security and Privacy [electronic resource] :Concepts, Protocols, and Architectures / by Dirk Henrici.
by Henrici, Dirk [author.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type:
Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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TA1637-1638 (Browse shelf) | Available | ||||
TK7882.S65 (Browse shelf) | Available | ||||
Long Loan | MAIN LIBRARY | TK5102.9 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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TK7882.S65 Multimodal User Interfaces | TK7882.S65 Microphone Array Signal Processing | TK7882.S65 Handover in DVB-H | TK7882.S65 RFID Security and Privacy | TK7882.S65 Handbook of Visual Display Technology | TK7882.S65 Informatics in Control, Automation and Robotics | TK7882.S65 Wavelets from Math to Practice |
Motivation and Vision -- Fundamentals -- Analysis and Modeling -- Securing RFID Systems -- Pseudonymization Infrastructures -- Extending the RFID System Model -- Current Research.
RFID technology is already used widely and is increasingly becoming a part of daily life. However, issues regarding security and privacy with respect to RFID technology have not been resolved satisfactorily. The challenges which must be overcome to resolve RFID security and privacy issues are immense; primarily because of the many constraints attached to the provision of security and privacy in RFID systems. These challenges are chiefly technical and economic in nature but also include ethical and social issues. Along with meeting the security and privacy needs of RFID technology, solutions must be inexpensive, practical, reliable, scalable, flexible, inter-organizational, and long lasting. The book analyses in detail the problems currently being faced by researchers working in the field of RFID technology and discusses the goals and attacker models. This is followed by an introduction to state-of-the-art of RFID security and privacy systems technology. The concepts which underlie the proposed protocols are highlighted, explained, and illustrated using examples. For building open, inter-organizational RFID systems, the classic RFID model is extended and considerations in new directions are explored. RFID systems are then integrated into other parts of the pervasive computing vision. Among the current research results presented in this book, a new comprehensive framework, including required protocols for operation, is introduced. It can be used economically on a global scope, supports inter-organizational cooperation and data sharing, and adheres to all the architectural guidelines derived in this work.
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