Identity, Security, Payments, Biometrics, Smart Cards and Authentication News

Righteous Ally and Achilles Heels

Friday, July 15, 2005
Privacy advocate Katherine Albrecht, an opponent of the use of radio tags on consumer goods and in ID documents, is a woman any X-Files fan could love. She’s youthful-looking and attractive, with fair skin and cherry-blonde hair. A former schoolteacher, Albrecht also has a master’s degree from Harvard, where she is completing a doctoral degree.”

Ok…

“But one aspect of Albrecht’s anti-RFID crusade has been attracting a lot of attention from other privacy groups: her religious beliefs.”

Wait, what?

“Many of us in the mainstream privacy community,” said [EFF Lawyer] Tien, “don’t know how to reach out to (the Christian community).”

As bloggers, developers of open source software and supporters of copyright reform, RFID News editors have long been supporters of the EFF. We also strongly believe that U.S. legislators need to define and extend privacy rights. Further, we encourage religious groups to participate in government and the democratic process.

However, the EFF’s goals of protecting personal information and Christian groups’ attempts to identify biblical prophecies are ideologically disparate. Both are worthwhile pursuits, yet the combination has been ineffective in curbing the development of identification systems. If you haven’t been paying attention, major credit card companies are deploying contactless payment mechanisms on a large scale, and data collection agencies have mishandled millions of citizens’ personal information.

By rallying against item-level RFID — a science-fiction technology decades away — the odd couple of privacy advocates and Christian groups share weaknesses. Easily characterized as both religious zealots and liberal academics, the anti-RFID movement is as faceless as it is distracted.

Mrs. Albrecht and the EFF have misguided a grassroots movement. Instead of lobbying for federal guidelines on how identifying information is collected and stored, resources are devoted to preventing elementary school identification cards and being spied on by razor blades. Both groups are attacking a straw-man. [end] 

Mobile operator Digicel Pacific Limited has announced the deployment of VeriFone’s mWallet services and NFC-enabled payment systems in the Kingdom of Tonga.

Starting this week, Digicel subscribers in the the Tongan capital Nuku’alofa will be able to receive NFC tags that are linked to their mobile phone numbers and VeriFone’s contactless payment acceptance systems. Customers can affix these tags to their phones to tap and pay at over 50 merchants in Nuku’alofa.

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Romanian bank BRD, a unit of Société Générale, has selected Oberthur Technologies to supply multi-application payment cards. These cards have payment scheme applications, as well as the ability to host transport, access control, PKI or biometric apps.

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CardSmith and wireless transactions provider Apriva, Scottsdale, Ariz., have entered into a strategic partnership to deliver a secure, mobile payment system integrated with CardSmith’s campus card platform.

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Barnes and Noble is planning to embed NFC technology in future Nook e-readers.

In an interview with Fortune, B&N CEO William Lynch related his vision of Nook users shopping for books by tapping their e-readers against an NFC chip embedded in the book’s cover, giving them instant access to reviews and other information – much like what publisher Atria piloted last October.

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EMVCo, the EMV technology standards body owned by American Express, JCB, MasterCard and Visa, released data showing the growth of EMV acceptance around the world, with nearly half of all payment cards and three-quarters of all payment terminals in circulation being based on EMV technology.

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VeriFone Systems has received certification of its EMV/NFC-enabled payment processing solution from Vantiv, a provider of payment processing services and related technology solutions for U.S. merchants and financial institutions.

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