Resources
Identity Use Cases & Scenarios.
FIDIS Deliverables.
Identity of Identity.
Interoperability.
Profiling.
D7.2: Descriptive analysis and inventory of profiling practices.
D7.3: Report on Actual and Possible Profiling Techniques in the Field of Ambient Intelligence.
D7.4: Implications of profiling practices on democracy.
D7.6 Workshop on AmI, Profiling and RFID.
D7.7: RFID, Profiling, and AmI.
D7.8: Workshop on Ambient Law.
D7.9: A Vision of Ambient Law.
D7.10: Multidisciplinary literature selection, with Wiki discussion forum on Profiling, AmI, RFID, Biometrics and Identity.
D7.11: Kick-off Workshop on biometric behavioural profiling and Transparency Enhancing Technologies.
Forensic Implications.
HighTechID.
Privacy and legal-social content.
Mobility and Identity.
Other.
IDIS Journal.
FIDIS Interactive.
Press & Events.
In-House Journal.
Booklets
Identity in a Networked World.
Identity R/Evolution.
D7.7: RFID, Profiling, and AmI
Table Of Content
- Executive Summary
- Introduction
- RFID, the ‘Internet of Things’ and autonomic profiling
- Introduction
- Autonomic computing and autonomic profiling
- Privacy and autonomy in the age of ‘everyware’
- Generic Understanding of AmI-Systems from a Technical Perspective
- RFID, RFID systems* and Identification
- Non-interactive Authentication and Tracking using RFID
- RFID systems*, AmI-systems and Security
- The Linkage between AmI, Profiling and RFID
- Summary
- Cases & Scenarios
- Introduction
- Case study: the Metro Future Store in Rheinberg
- Case-study: Usage of RFID Technology in Educational Settings
- RFID at the CVS Corporation
- Scenario for social inclusion
- Security risks for RFID-enabled profiling
- Scenario for individual/group profiling: the link between privacy and CRM
- Legal Aspects
- Data Protection legislation
- Liability Issues
- Introduction
- RFID systems*
- Different liability regimes; no unified law on liability
- Different liability regimes; Directive on defective products
- Conclusion
- Implications for Criminal Law
- Study of Social Aspects
- Social implications and policy options for RFID and Profiling as AmI enabling technologies
- Introduction
- Focus on RFID
- Protection of the Private sphere
- Technical solutions for privacy options
- Other points to be taken into account
- Conclusion
- Social acceptance of RFID in retail
- Introduction
- Perceived Control
- The modified Technology Acceptance Model
- Conclusion
- Social Studies of Technology: Perspectives for AmI and RFID
- Introduction
- Technological and economical deterministic perspectives
- Constructivist theories
- Conclusion
- TFI perspectives on RFID as an AmI enabling technology
- Introduction
- The TFI Model
- RFID - Technical Concerns
- Formal dimensions in the discourse of RFID
- The Informal layer of RFID systems* – Analysis of User Perceptions
- Summary and Conclusion
- Implications for democracy and rule of law
- Introduction
- The framework of democracy and rule of law
- Profiling, self-identity and ‘The Internet of Things’
- Profiling and self-identity
- Autonomic profiling, AmI and self-identity
- The Internet of Things: The end of constitutional democracy?
- Constitutional democracy in a tagged world
- Conclusions
- Summary and Conclusions
- Annex: Introduction to RFID Systems
- *
- Basic operation of RFID systems*
- Types of RFID systems
- *
- Transmission Frequencies and Related Effects
- Selected Standards
- References
- Abbreviations & Glossary