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

Aussies monitor trash, prisoners

Monday, April 14, 2008

Two stories out of Australia showcase the increasing ubiquity of RFID applications in everyday life.

First, in the suburbs of Sydney, 78,000 residential trash bins have been fitted with RFID tags. When the bins are emptied each week, the tags will transmit data to the truck, letting municipal officials know how much waste is being generated by each address, and whether recyclables are being properly sorted.

One official says the data will be used to target problem areas for recycling, not to generate fines for improper disposal.


But what if particularly poor recycling habits do land Australians in trouble with the law? Alanco Technologies has that covered.

Inmates at the Alexander Maconochie Centre prison in Canberra are now being tracked with Alanco’s RFID technology. The prison houses multiple classifications of prisoner, including juvenile offenders and a mix of males and females. The RFID system monitors physical separation and controls movement between population segments, and hopes to improve staff efficiency and other attempts at cost-cutting.

Alanco plans to market similar systems to the approximately 100 other prisons in Australia and New Zealand.

Read the full stories here and here[end] 

ADR Software was tapped for its Workforce Monitor construction site labor monitoring service at a large scale government facility improvement project in Arlington, Va.

The system logged nearly 2,300 workers from over 181 companies using ADR Software’s advanced RFID-enabled monitoring stations. Workforce Monitor utilizes RFID tags, embedded in stickers affixed to hard hats and ID badges to monitor workforce traffic, while producing daily workforce reports on specific sub-contractor resources and hours throughout time spent on site.

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The cities of Cincinnati and Grand Rapids, Mich. have implemented an RFID-based recycling system from the duo of UPM RFID and Cascade Engineering. The two municipalities are using RFID technology to optimize waste management processes and to motivate citizen behavioral change with incentive-based recycling programs and pay-as-you-throw pricing.

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A group of graduate students at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) are working to develop a new type of sensor using RFID technology to monitor freshness levels in fruits and vegetables, according to scdigest.com.

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New Jersey Transit’s use of NFC payments with Google Wallet has been an “overwhelming and resounding success,” according to NJ Transit spokesman John Durson.

Introduced on the NJ Transit network in October 2011, Google Wallet enables riders to purchase tickets with the tap of an NFC-enabled phone at New York Penn Station, Newark Liberty Airport’s rail station and on 7 city bus lines.

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Prisoners at Tihar prisons, located near New Delhi, India, will now be using smart cards instead of paper coupons for their food purchases.

As reported by The Economic Times, the former system of paper food coupons led to misuse and illegal activity within the jail. Some prisoners would use it for currency in order to get banned substances or buy favors from others.

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The biometric program at HMP Isis prison in London requires inmates to authenticate their identities via thumbprint before moving from one area to the next. System errors, however, have been leading to back-ups that leads to all prisoners waiting before they can move on, according to an article from The Telegraph.

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