Michelin to Include RFID Transmitter in Every Tire 688
An anonymous reader writes "According to the RFID Journal, Michelin (the tire manufacturer) has announced that it is planning on embedding RFID transmitters into every tire. The article states that 'the microchip stores the tire's unique ID, which can be associated with the vehicle identification number.' Let the privacy invasion begin!" If they're going to embed electronics in tires, I wish they'd start with tiny pressure gauges. (See also this story from a few days ago about the coming surge in RFID tags.)
How tough are RFID tags? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How tough are RFID tags? (Score:2)
More amusing ways to destroy RFID tags (Score:4, Funny)
How to destroy RFID's in 30 seconds [ev1.net]
For the Windows-media impaired, here's a much shorter MPG [corvetteforum.net] with the same idea.
Well, that's stupid (Score:2)
OTOH, I can't wait for the Jack in The Box antenna ornaments with GPS positioning systems.
tire gauges (Score:2, Insightful)
But more importantly, I doubt this will be a huge invasion of privacy deal, seriously it's not like you don't have the registration to your car and everything already, assuming we all aren't car theives I don't think we have anything to worry about.
actually (Score:3, Interesting)
I also agree with the previous post. Tying the tire to the registration shouldn't be a big deal. Its not like I can't walk up to your car, and read the VIN directly off the windshield. And its also not like I can't read your license plate number, take it to the DMV, and pull your records for a cheap fee of 7 dollars... (Don't you love Oregon?) Or free, as sometimes people like to post the database on-line, but they usually get nasty-grams shortly thereafter.
Re:tire gauges (Score:4, Redundant)
Re:tire gauges (Score:3, Interesting)
Now I have all the information to make off with the most money and the least risk. I've done this with about $50 in parts from any online electronics retailer and the help of my friend Bob who works at Michelen.
A contrived example, I admit, but at least give it some thought.
who ordered this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:who ordered this? (Score:2)
Amen! Mod parent up!
Congress did, I guess (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Congress did, I guess (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not worried about a perfect database. I'm worried about an imperfect database that some idiot *will* insist on treating as if it were perfect.
What happens with the cars with serial numbers which "don't exist"? I would assume that you handle it somehow, reasonably. The problem with automated systems is that while they can reason sylogistically, they are quite incapable of being reasonable. Correct logic from faulty premises leads to incorrect conclusions.
23 (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, wait, I have the winner: Kia! ;-)
Oh, wait, the winner is GM.
Don't Fuck with Homeland Security (Score:5, Funny)
put them in condoms, too.
Overheard in a tire store near you (Score:5, Funny)
or,
"Why does the rubber on this tire appear melted?"
Brings new meaning to the phrase burning rubber....
Re:Overheard in a tire store near you (Score:3, Insightful)
New slogan announced (Score:5, Funny)
Re:New slogan announced (Score:5, Informative)
Re:New slogan announced (Score:3, Insightful)
It is politically untenable to track opposition leaders. It is quite possible, however, to get the populace to accept that EVERYONE will be tracked for their own good (protection from communists, drug dealers, terrorists, etc - depending on the decade).
Once that becomes acceptable, you are quite right that 99.999% of the information will be thrown away. It's the
Then there's the issue with databases in general - sure, the government doesn't care much about it, though they want the information around in case they find someone they want to harass. There are thousands of scrupleless private investigators who would LOVE to get their hands on that info, and thousands of scrupleless hackers who would help them. Relevant to this story, if John Doe suspected infidelity on the part of the spouse who was divorcing him, don't you think a log of all the places his wife had driven would be interesting to him?
Privacy means two things...freedom from government harassment and freedom from private harassment. Let the government monitor everyone, and they'll harass the people who make the government uncomfortable. You can't protect only the activists; you have to protect everyone. Let the government maintain databases on everyone and that information becomes available to everyone willing to pay, whether it's criminal to hack the database or not.
You place entirely too much trust in the scruples of demonstrably unscrupulous categories of people.
Next thing you know (Score:5, Funny)
The Law, and they do! (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, and to respond to the editors comment about how they should make tired that track tire pressure instead, they already do! [rfidjournal.com] (Is it okay for me to tell the editor to RTFA?
Re:The Law, and they do! (Score:3, Interesting)
The Ford Explorer tragedies were horrible. My friend's cousin was the fourth documented case in the state of Florida. If implementing technology like this can save one life, I say go for it!
Re:The Law, and they do! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Law, and they do! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The Law, and they do! (Score:2)
Re:The Law, and they do! (Score:5, Funny)
Oh don't worry, we already are. If there's an invasion of privacy going on, Congress is somehow involved.
Oh, and Hillary Rosen.
bar code? something smells. (Score:5, Insightful)
Recalls are not driving this. It would be cheaper to do this another way and unique IDs are not needed for recalls.
Does anyone think it's cheaper to "invest" in all new equipment than it is to use established bar codes? Tell me why the company can't paint a nice little white bar coded serial number on the side of the tire? Everyone's got barcode readers and they would be more practical. How is a tire shop going to check the serial number of a single tire, when every tire in range answers?
RFIDs are only useful for others who have nothing to do with tire recalls. Does anyone really expect to be told that their tires are recalled? Most recalls are silent, you either find out about them on your own from paid advertisements or you don't. While it would be very nice for Michalin to contact me if my particular lot of tires is bum, I don't see what that has to do with someone being able to ID my car from a distance. If tire lot is all you need, why the unique number? Won't unique serial numbers actually impeed lot recognition? When tires are sold at a shop all the information the company needs to meet the stated goal is collected. After that, no one else needs to know who you are.
One good product deserves another. (Score:5, Interesting)
Instant privacy.
Re:One good product deserves another. (Score:5, Interesting)
Mmmm. But will it be legal? Or could you be found guilty of circumventing (or distributing equipment to circumvent) a certified consumer protection device?
(I'd invoke the DMCA here, but I can't imagine how in the world even it could be used).
Re:One good product deserves another. (Score:5, Informative)
I suspect something on the order of 10's of watts (very low power) would easily do it. Even if it was on a harmonic of the original frequency, in which case you might get away with consumer hardware. Or, even something as simple as a strong magnetic field - you can make one of those if you have a coil and current.
Swaping like grocery store cards (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Swaping like grocery store cards (Score:5, Funny)
Please, join the club.
Too Bad The Way Around That Won't Work With Tires? (Score:3, Interesting)
Swapping tires... (Score:5, Funny)
They already do.
Park your car in a garage in New York City. See if you have the same tires when you get it back.
B-)
Tinfoil Shielding.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Tinfoil Shielding.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Tinfoil Shielding.... (Score:5, Funny)
Tin Foil Rims
Guarantees a fly ride for the paranoid gangsta. Oh yeah.
oooh, let's network them. (Score:5, Funny)
Tire leftFrontTire = new Tire(props);
if(leftFrontTire.pressure > randomVar) {
leftFrontTire.implode();
}
Some Cars Already Have Pressure Warning Systems (Score:3, Informative)
Several cars already have tire low pressure warning systems. I know the Chevy Corvette has had such a system for the past decade, at least.
Boycott! (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously this is crazy. Yeah RF ID tags have a limited range and when pinged can reply with only contain a single large integer. However lets review:
Many cars pass through tollbooths, drive throughs, etc. frequently. Any of these locations could easily be fitted with RFID scanners.
Even if Michelin doesn't share their RFID info with anybody else, it would still be pretty easy for the tollboth to read out all 4 numbers in your tires and take a snapshot of your license plate. DING! And even if they DON'T know your license plate/make/model/etc they can still see every time those 4 tires roll past their scanner.
Now I have to microwave my tires before I get them mounted.
BTW this article involves your rights and is online, hence "Your Rights Online". Quit your bitching.
Re:Boycott! (Score:5, Funny)
Firestones are great except for that flipping over and blowing up part.
Re:Boycott! (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway think about it, new Firestones are probably the SAFEST tires on the road. They're triple-checking everything.
Re:Licence plates (Score:5, Insightful)
The scary thing about RFID is that this process has the ability to become totally passive, and require no human intervention. RFID sensors can be installed in a drive through, toll booth, or stop light, add a little data sharing, and presto! There is an instant profile of your daily travels.
An RFID tag is like a doubleclick cookie without an optout clause.
Total Information Awareness -- Redux (Score:5, Funny)
So how is this a privacy issue? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:So how is this a privacy issue? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So how is this a privacy issue? (Score:5, Funny)
You are definitely right, it's absolutely absurd that they're doing this. Next thing we're going to be given an identification number that we have to prominently display on our car that is linked to our VIN that _anybody_ can see and find out information about us!
Because the RFID can be read by remote sensors... (Score:2)
-Isaac
Excellent (Score:5, Interesting)
Man, this is a terriffic idea.
Easy to disable (Score:5, Insightful)
This decision was mentioned a few days ago in the Times I think, and the intent to transmit tire pressures was specified. As for privacy problems, I think it's a little premature. Anyone close enough to scan your "tire chips" could just write down or photograph your license plate anyway (thouse red light cameras come pretty close), and soon enough with OCR traffic cameras will be able to record your passing. So anonymity in public is a fleeting thing anyway, and the Fourth Amendment won't stop it.
Also, it is easy enough to buy tires anonymously by using the green stuff.
To protect privacy, campaigning has to focus on the weak leak: The government. That the administration would even propose TIA reflects a serious problem already; privacy is the orphan right.
Re:Easy to disable (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, you do need to find the chip first. Those things are getting really small at this point.
and soon enough with OCR traffic cameras will be able to record your passing. So anonymity in public is a fleeting thing anyway, and the Fourth Amendment won't stop it.
I hate this argument, every time I see it. I agree that with the current technology, it is becoming eaiser to do this sort of thing, but why exactly should we adopt the attitude of "roll over and accept it"? The only way privacy issues will ever gain any traction now, or in the future, is if we start fighting them where we can. The idea that privacy is already gone and we should "get over it" is absolute idiocy.
Also, it is easy enough to buy tires anonymously by using the green stuff.
You're forgetting that the shop, which installs the tires, collects all of the information about the customer. (VIN, name, address, telephone number). Unless you mount all of your tires yourself, which is a real pain without the right equipment.
In my not so humble opinion, this whole monitoring and tracking thing is really turned on its head. The govenment is there to serve the people. Not the other way around. If anything, we should have tracking devices implanted in all govenment officials, and in all govenment equipment, such that, any one who wishes to, could log on to a web site and track any and all govenment resources, except where it might create a real national security issue.
Re:Easy to disable (Score:3, Informative)
Gee, thanks.
My point was different: I think fighting tire chips is silly because the state already has plenty of alternatives. We can't stop it because it's already happened, and making a protest over some token new item is a waste of time; we might as well accept whatever benefits we can get.
The prevalence of video cameras makes me skeptical that law enforcement would bother assembling the database and tearing up all the streets when they already have a great system of tracking -- license plates. It wasn't widely discussed, but the snipers' license plates were run something like 9 times and their plate was photographed by a red light camera in the weeks they were doing their thing. If we had known what we were looking for we would have caught them earlier; meanwhile, law enforcement was apparently running the plates on no specific suspicion (remember, everyone said we were looking for a white truck). So
The Fourth Amendment is no help, because the Supreme Court ruled [findlaw.com] 20 years ago that the police could place a tracking device on your care without a warrant (!). I doubt exterior surveillance by camera would raise a constitutional problem, though I do hope that the Supreme Court will at some point look at the aggregate of all these little intrusions and conclude that an overall police state is unconstitutional. However, that would inject them into government in a way the Court does not want; and they've been fairly indifferent to privacy (notwithstanding the surprise thermal imaging decision).
So the effort of privacy advocates must be in legislation. The courts won't do it, and avoiding Michelin tires definitely won't do it. I'm hardly advocating acquiescence, just not tilting at windmills.
Oh, the icepick was a joke.
I think a RF pulse (microwave) would do it too (Score:3, Interesting)
If these are in my next $1600cdn set of Michelin Pilot Sports, I'll have a circuit to disable them on the net in the summer. I didn't buy those tires 'cause I like driving 55mph.
Good bye privacy. SOONER, not later. (Score:2, Flamebait)
Seriously, what's to say, after EVERYTHING is tagged, that the masses could not also be tagged themselves? The Government tells women what they can and can't do with their own bodies all the time (abortion). Extend that control to men's bodies as well, and add human-chip implants.
Pressure Monitors (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.tirerack.com/accessories/smartire/sm
No Michelins for the police or feds (Score:2, Insightful)
how safe will they be at high speed? (Score:2, Troll)
I'm curious - have they compensated in the design for asymetrical weight? Its one thing on a regular econobox that might see 70 or 80 mph, and another for a car that is capable of seeing 180+ (not entirely stock). I'd hate to have a tire come apart at that speed during a track event (anyone dumb enough to do 3+ miles per minute on the interstate deserves to have the tire come apart)
Since the feds are requiring this, there is probably limited liablility, if any, on the tire manufacturers part.
Finally the article isn't really specific - is this for new cars only, or every single tire sold? Too bad that tires age and deteriorate, or I'd stock up on a few sets (listens to wallet sigh in relief).
F1 cars have pressure gauges (Score:3, Interesting)
Cost a lot more then RFID tags, I'm sure.
They are talking about (Score:2)
Other Rubber Things with RFIDs (Score:2)
It'd be great if it was Firestone... (Score:2)
RFID FAQ (Score:5, Informative)
More information can be had from Microchip [microchip.com], a leading manufacturer of RFID devices. A lot of this information is coming from their RFID Design Guide [microchip.com]
1. What is an RFID tag?
An RFID tag is a very small microcontroller and radio transmitter/receiver. They typically consist of a single chip and a single coil which behaves as an antenna.
2. What does an RFID tag transmit?
Most RFID tags transmit a single large integer number, unique to that individual tag. A serial number, if you will. Some RF tags also have a very small amount of ROM/EEPROM, and so could transmit a little more info and can even be reprogrammed by the "reader".
3. How are they powered?
The RFID "reader" device emits RF energy. The RFID tag receives this energy and uses it to power itself. It's a lot like an old AM crystal radio. The device transmits its number over and over at a very high bps for a high level of data redundancy.
There is a whole shitload more technical modulation theory and stuff that goes on here which I'm leaving out. If you aren't a ham or other radio type person it would probably be meaningless. Again if you would like more info, look here [microchip.com].
Re:RFID FAQ (Score:5, Informative)
The typical range is a few feet, a la Mobil SpeedPass or tollbooth EZPass. Think about how often you come within a few feet of something that could secretly house an RFID tag reader... The THEORETICAL range limit is a few feet PLUS line-of-sight. A high gain antenna on the reader could read tags from a great distance away, just like your Pringles can 802.11 antenna.
5. Aren't RF tags already on all kinds of stuff as an anti theft measure?
No. The RF tags at BestBuy are not ID tags. They don't have a serial number in them. They are ON or OFF. Take one out if you don't belive me, it's just a strip of metal, just like in library books. They are not active devices. An RFID tag is a COMPUTER with RAM and ROM and a data radio.
I actually don't mind this much.... (Score:3, Insightful)
First of all, privacy's not really a big issue in this instance A good portion of driving happens on public roadways already -- where one is obligated to have the car's license plates plainly visible (which can, all by themselves, be used as identifying information). This coupled with the necessity of the ability to produce a valid drivers license and vehicle registration where circumstances warrant shows that a person doesn't really have much right to privacy while driving anyways.
Secondly, identifying arbitrary individuals with this would be like finding a needle in a haystack (more specifically, like getting one particular needle out of a haystack made of almost identical needles).
Besides... the usefulness that technology like this would have for being able to track stolen vehicles is obvious.
Oh, I do agree with the original poster on the point that embedding tire gauges into tires would be a really cool feature.
Only the Wackos Will Let This Bother Them (Score:3, Insightful)
1. The truly paranoid
2. The truly criminal
3. People whose self-esteem rests on believing that everyone but them is crooked and evil.
People can surveil you anywhere you go, your car can be identified in commercial satellite imagery, the grocery knows what you buy, the phone company knows who you call, the cable company knows what TV programs you watch, and your ISP knows what web sites you visit and who gets your email.....and now you're upset?
Not a big deal (Score:3, Interesting)
This will allow for improved tracking of products and product defects/hazards. Nothing new in terms of associating a tire with a car or owner. In fact, if someone steals your tires/wheels, you just might stand a better chance of recovery.
The black helicopters already have enough means to track you...they don't need help from the tire industry.
Look what happened to me (Score:5, Interesting)
We thought they were purely for access control, but we were in for a surprise. The management had fitted special sensors at the toilet and cafe doors as well as at the drinks machines and smoking rooms. We had no idea management had done this, we just though new heating control thermometers were being fitted.
Once our bi-monthly productivity appraisals came round we were presented with a detailed breakdown of our movement round the building. I was asked why I made 12 visits to the coffee machine in one day (all drinks were free) and why I once spent more than 10 minutes in the toilet,
What management had done was turn the securty cards in to tracking devices. Basically if we went within 4 feet of these sensors, it was logged. We had always assumed that the cards had to be within 2 inches of a sensor to be recognised, not so aparently. This whole setup was implemented to try and achieve productivity gains, in fact it did the opposite. A lot of people spent more and more time on the toilet for some reason and other people developed a habit of forgetting their cards and having to get security to release the doors remotely.
The moral of the story is what started as a innocent security system, turned in to a tracking system which caused people serious stress. I know my employers are allowed to know what I do on their time, but having to justify my toilet habits is my idea of how such technology as RFID systems can be misused. Incidentally, the system was switched off after the unions got on the case.
Re:Look what happened to me (Score:5, Funny)
You're telling me nobody flushed 'em down the toilet? That would be fun for the tracking system!
Or, a favourite. Buy a sandwich at the sandwich machine. Put the card in the sandwich's place. Heh.
No, no, best idea: Plant the card on your boss. When he chews out your ass, tell him to check his.
Re:Look what happened to me (Score:3, Insightful)
Easy to disable (Score:3, Interesting)
General Comments (Score:3, Insightful)
I've seen a picture of one of these tires in some other article. Michelin is so proud of solving the technical challenges, they are putting stickers on the side of the tires. Two years from now, if you want to know if its in your tire, look for the sticker. After all, the "technicians" changing your oil need to be able to tell if they can use the new-fangled tire reader on your tires or not.
Ultimate Privacy Solutions (Score:3, Funny)
Take the fucking bus.
Ride around on your banned Segway.
"When pogo-sticks get outlawed, only outlaws will bounce around and not be tracked by the Feds."
French Nazi's (Score:3, Funny)
Refuting some common arguments (Score:5, Interesting)
1) You have to be 2 feet from the tire.
2) You already have license plates
3) This just IDs the tire, not you
4) No one cares about you
Now I'm not a paranoid freak, but these are just stupid arguments as I'll demonstrate.
1) When you pull through the drive through at McD's and the Bank, you are less than 2 feet and sit there for quite some time. McD's might like to now that VIN #12345 always orders a BigMac, and by linking your VIN to you, they know what you like.
2) Yes, but license plates can not be read without direct line of site, by a computer, for little or no cost.
3) This ties the tires to the VIN of your car, which IDs you.
4) The government may not be trying to track me down, but companies would love to have a way to track their customers.
Let's all not get too paranoid, but at least think things through.
I have to raise the B.S. Flag (Score:3, Insightful)
I could *maybe* see them putting this into the highest of high performance tires as security devices.
Sorry but... (Score:3, Interesting)
Pretty much every excuse ever given for not having measures like this introduced into products, relates to not getting caught breaking the law!
Not only that, but it is extreme paranoia.. for example, how do you go from talking about RFID tags in tyres, right up to saying that people will be able to view on the internet whose house you parked at, or which garages you were filling up at? It just wouldn't happen.
But what about the plus sides? Could RFID tags in all of your tyres, if matched to your VIN number (and consequently your name and address) be useful in tracking stolen cars? Considering the apparent breach of 'my rights', I think that is a pretty useful advantage.
As far as I see it, in all of these cases if you dont break the law then you have nothing to lose. I am not saying that I dont break the law (who can honestly say they never have) but never to the point where I have risked going to jail, and never to the extreme that I am worried about getting caught.
How long till they act like Lexmark? (Score:3, Interesting)
Garage (Score:4, Insightful)
Before you freak out about Big Brother ... (Score:3, Insightful)
This has some advantages for the consumer beyond the inventory and supply chain management improvements for Michelin.
For one it will be easier to spot counterfit Michelin tires. Before you scoff be aware this is a big problem for Michelin and some other high end tire makers. It is not uncommon to buy a brand name tire and get a phony tire made overseas or a re-tread sold as new.
Another application would be to embed multiple tags to indicate tire wear. When certain tags wear away you will know the tire needs to be replaced.
Imaging the RFID tags were combined with pressure and temprature gauges. This would allow you to know this from inside the car while it was moving.
I doubt the "Man" is going to go around installing RFID readers everywhere just because one tire maker with a small slice of the market starts putting tags in their tires. Besides all you get when you get when you read a RFID tag is a number. A unique number to be sure, but without a lookup to the various supply chain databases a fairly meaningless number.
Re:Just curious... (Score:2)
google cache:
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:Xl5flbqI4d
Re:Me too (Score:2)
I'm sure that's a misdemeanor in most states.
Re:Me too (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The ID'ing sucks... (Score:5, Informative)
The devices are powered by received RF energy, which the "reader" transmits. This isn't crazy, remember crystal AM radios? Did you know that you can listen to AM stations using a reciever that's powered BY the AM signal? Did you know that you can string a long wire parallel to the power lines and steal power from the electric company via electrical induction?
You can read ALL about commercial RFID systems at http://www.microchip.com/1010/pline/frequency/rfc
uh... don't be dense (Score:5, Interesting)
Now associate those numbers with your VIN (Vehicle Identification Number) which uniquely identifies your car.
Your VIN is already connected to things like your name, address, insurance carrier and so on.
So now you are driving down a street and any number of automated systems can know it is you (well, your car at least). So you have essentially been tagged like a spring buck.
Worse, but more interesting, a well equipt "ring" of duck-and-squat or similar con artists can now "interview" your car to see if you've got good rip-off potential.
Authorities can target and track you. Who needs racial profiling? The cop is asleep in his car when an alarm goes off to tell him someone meeting his favorite criteria is driving by. How about "that car is owned by a white person" listing getting your black roomate killed for borrowing your car?
Far worse than that, the piece in question is easily accessable.
If systems (toll booths etc?) start using this data for any purpose then I could "swap out" one of your tires and drive around "as you", possibly for days. When was the last time you *really* looked at your passenger side rear wheel? How about your spare?
In even legitimate cases ("Sure Clem, you can borrow my snow tires for the weekend...") of transfer you could become identity-entangled with who knows what...
Being made "trackable" is always a rights issue.
Re:uh... don't be dense (Score:5, Insightful)
If you car is "suddenly" equiped with one or two liscence plates that each display a unique serial number by means of reflected visual light, well, that is "bad" from a privacy standpoint.
Now associate those numbers with your VIN (Vehicle Identification Number) which uniquely identifies your car.
Your VIN is already connected to things like your name, address, insurance carrier and so on.
So now you are driving down a street and any number of automated systems (OCR) can know it is you (well, your car at least). So you have essentially been tagged like a spring buck.
You car already HAS a unique identifier tacked on it, your liscence plate which is illegal to remove or alter. More, unlike RFID which requires a transmitter and close (very close in the scale and speed on whcih cars operate) proximity to operate, a liscence plate can simply be read with your eyes. It is tied to your registration, which is tied to your vin. With a liscence plate number and an onld analogue radio a cop can call up just about anything they need to know about the car in question.
Some Points on Effectiveness (Score:5, Interesting)
First, I've never heard of police cars being equipped with live OCR equipment. First you'd have to be able to single out the license plate text from that of the neighboring car, or a road sign, or even a piece of litter tumbling across your Line-of-Sight.
Second, the only reason to have such live OCR would be for aid in automating vehicle tracking. While the ACLU (or international counterparts) would be quick to try to plaster attention over this, people already consider it common.
Third, searches through public databases take time. It's not like they'll be able to identify you the moment their computer gets a lock on your identifying characteristic. Local caching would be prohibitively expensive for your average police department, no matter what the size of the city.
Fourth, there's really no range limit on how far away you could detect these things. Your effective range depends on the power being broadcasted at, and the sensitivity of your instruments. It being a digital signal makes the matter a heck of a lot easier.
Fifth, it might be possible to fry the RFID device by feeding it so much RF power that its circuitry melts. (I know I'd certainly try if I had tires or clothing that had these devices. I'd go park next to a high-power radio tower for a few hours.) There'd certainly be a market in devices capable of high-power directional transmissions. The devices are probably already illegal.
Sixth, the government is going to have a hell of a time passing laws prohibiting unlicensed transfer of RFID-enabled devices. And I can tell you that laws regulating the sales and transfers of something so common as tires (and, later, clothing, shoes, etc.).
Seventh, if you need an alibi, intentionally broadcast one of your RFIDs at, say, forty watts. (Talk about getting around a lot!) Or just send someone driving around with your RFID clothing, or driving around in your car.
Eighth, 1984 should have been titled 2005. People don't take it seriously because the things it predicted didn't happen by 1984.
Re:Some Points on Effectiveness (Score:5, Interesting)
RFID is parasitically powered from the interrogating device. Powering it from a long way away on a moving target seems hard.
Also, you'd need to be able to distinguish from multiple transmissions on the same frequency to recover the serial number. A very high gain antenna (parabolic dish) still has a beamwidth of >= 2 degrees. Being able to power the RFID devices from more than 10 feet away, and also receive the return signal, without giving everyone cataracts from the microwave exposure seems like a hard problem.
Most RFID systems are not truely RF based, but are magnetically/inductively coupled at a relatively low frequency. These are not going to have any kind of range at all, and a high gain "antenna" (directional electromagnet) would be huge.
Finally, vehicles move. Even a speedy RFID tag that transmits at 12kbps takes 1/46th of a second to send a typical 256 bit message (serial number + checksum + overhead). It takes 5-6 times this in practice to power the tag, interrogate it, and receive a response, in which time the car has moved >10ft at 60MPH. So even if you could have an ultra-high-gain antenna, it'd have to be significantly steerable, too.
I'm not very worried. Compared to a license plate/VIN this is nothing.
Re:Some Points on Effectiveness (Score:3, Informative)
You could make the same argument about the RFID; there's nothing saying what either technology will or won't be used for
It takes maybe 5 seconds to run someone's plate if there's a laptop in the cruiser, otherwise maybe 20 seconds to read the plate over the radio and get the details from dispatch (this is why cops in precincts without laptops will follow you for a block before pulling you over). I don't see why an automated device would take longer than an officer. It would take much longer to search a database of RFIDs, since ther would be 5x as many records
Your other points are very valid, I just wanted to clarify those first three: for close-range, it's much easier to get someone's plate, and if they're parked, their VIN.
Re:Some Points on Effectiveness (Score:3, Informative)
First, I've never heard of police cars being equipped with live OCR equipment.
IDK about police cars, but over here (.nl), the police have been experimenting with a stationary OCR system. The experiment involved checking everyone's average speed over a 3-km stretch of highway (read licence plates at beginning and end, calculate time between passages).
Re:uh... don't be dense (Score:3, Insightful)
Automation is the key (Score:3, Informative)
It's the work of 2 minutes to swap plates with a similar-appearing car in some parking lot... but a bit harder to swap out tires; most people keep the same set for years... 50-60K miles is 3-4+ years of driving for the average american. If implanting microchips in the human body hits a roadblock (privacy concerns, "number-of-the-beast" arguments), then why not track the vehicle? It's practically the same thing.
Vehicles are used mostly by single individuals, or single households with driving-age teenagers. Knowing where a vehicle goes is knowing what the household does. Marketing types have feverish dreams about the kind of demographic data you could gather with this.
This could also be useful for law enforcement, but not in the immediate future. What the law-enforcement-as-big-brother scenario lacks is a network of tranmitter/receiver modules embedded in the roads and curbs. Once those are commonplace, automated tracking of a vehicle becomes a piece of cake.
Most people don't realize just how labor-intensive a good surveillance operation can be. You need multiple teams, several different vehicles, and personnel skilled in the art of being unobtrusive. Visually surveiling someone requires manpower, training, and can be difficult under the best of circumstances (let alone at night, or in bad weather). GPS units are being used for this, but planting them can be a challenge, and a technically saavy target could detect or jam the transmission. Unique IDs in the tires and a network of readers might not give up-to-the-second velocity and position data, but they might be good enough...
Car 1: "I got caught at the traffic light... lost 'im"
Dispatcher: "He just took 131st street west... Car 2, turn right and pick him up at the next cross-street"
Car 2: "got it"
Re:Automation is the key (Score:3, Insightful)
A problem, however with identifying "me" by my tires; if I want new tires, I'll go to Sears and buy a couple pairs, or go to my (small) mechanic and have him install a few tires. Now, he can either install new or used tires at my behest (depending on how long I intend to keep the vehicle, and drive it in the meantime). So where's the association? I can assure you that I'm not going to let some minimum wage Sears schmuck follow me to my car and record my VIN. Hell, for all he knows I'm using my friend's van to pick up the tires. The logistics just aren't reailstic.
License plates are, by nature, assigned to a VIN. Tires are not associated, and are only slightly more difficult to interchange (give me a jack and ten minutes and I'll do it on the side of a road).
Yes, I'm sure there's value to adding tracking devices to everything worth more than $50 that we may purchase in our lifetimes, but there are also drawbacks. If the "good guys" (subjective) can track my tires, so can the "bad guys" (also subjective). What I don't like, however, is the ability of anybody to easily track me. Atleast it takes some minimal effort to track my license plate - a person has to look at every car matching my description (if I threw a rock from my driveway, it'd probably bounce off atleast four other J-Body cavaliers, so YMMV. ;) )
I, personally, can't see the advantages of this outweighing the disadvantages and costs associated. Somewhere, I'm sure somebody has a great plan. Nevertheless, I think I'll stick to Goodyear [goodyear.com]
Yeah, but then readers would be required nation-wide which is costly to say the least. The resaon 'automated roads' have been back-burnered is the astronomical expense of implementing it in any large scale. I don't see RFID readers being implemented in a nation-wide net any time soon. All you'd have to do to escape 'the man' is to hit a concession or a country road.
Re:uh... don't be dense (Score:5, Insightful)
Because "the man" asked them to. As flight schools had "no reason" to hand over their lists of students, as ISPs had "no reason" to hand over their customer info... Once the information exists, and law enforcement wants it, it can just ask for it, in these days with any or no excuse.
Re:uh... don't be dense (Score:4, Insightful)
I have a friend who used to be a telemarketer, and he used to tell me all kinds of fun stuff about their lists of phone numbers they'd have to call. They'd get lists of people who just had children born to them from the hospitals, so they can be called up and offered parenting magazine subscriptions. They'd get reports from police stations about illegal possession of firearms and then these people would be targeted for sales of "guns and ammo." If the hospitals and the police are already willing to sell their lists, what makes you think that something as "reputable" as a TIRE MANUFACTURER won't sell theirs? heh.
Furthermore, although it is true that everything can be used for both good and bad, the greater likelihood is that it will be used for something bad or oppressive. The DMCA is a great example of what people initially thought would be a "good" law, but it turns out it prevents people from posting ads from newspapers on black friday and all other kinds of inane bullshit that the DMCA shouldn't even apply to.
If you give those "in control" a way to more-efficiently or more-effectively "control" the ones they're "in control" of, they're going to use this new technology or method exhaustively "for the greater good" even if it walks all over our rights, because it holds the illusion of making their job easy or making a human system flawless. A human system by its nature will never be flawless, because it is human, but that doesn't mean that those "in power" or "in control" aren't lusting after a "perfect solution" which will put them in the position to watch everybody and make sure they behave.
The more you take things like this lightly, the more you're letting your guard down. You need to believe that the only person that will protect you and your rights is yourself, and you need to believe that everybody else out there has wants and desires FOR or OF you which are completely counter to your own. Only by encountering all friends as enemies can you ensure that your personal privacy and security will be preserved.
Question everything.
What's online is: (Score:5, Informative)
What ends up online is where you are....
What it means to me... (Score:5, Insightful)
Though I suspect that given the distances I drive here in Australia, it's unlikely to ever be a problem.
After all, they can't even maintain mobile phone coverage without a fairly hefty power input.
Re:What it means to me... (Score:3, Insightful)
One question: Can you skip over the FBI piracy warning/commercials when your playing a DVD in your DVD player? One that you can get your hands on? Oh, wait...
Re:I don't see the problem with RFID (Score:2)
Cool! Instant suspects! Who cares if the people were actually involved. They were close to the area, so they must have been up to no good. Bring 'em in!
Re:Analog/RF Engineers: How Hard To Build a Jammer (Score:2, Interesting)
It appears that in the US RFID tags use the unlicensed spectrum (902MHz - 928MHz), (2.4GHz - 2.483GHz). The problem with jamming these frequencies is that you'll also knock out cordless phones and wireless LAN's, and most other things in the unlicensed spectrum. Of course, it all depends on the strength of your jammer.
Instead, I think it would be easier to find where the RFID chips are implanted in your tires and introduce them to Mr. Taser.
Re:RFID tyres != lack of privacy.... RTFA (Score:3, Insightful)
If you don't do anything wrong, why worry about illegal searches? Why seal envelopes when you mail them? Why EVER use PGP? Why encrypt, period? What are you trying to hide criminal?
Never EVER use any iteration of the phrase, "If you don't do anything wrong then you have nothing to worry about." That is the road to zero civil liberties. That is the road to Police State.