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
Summary
RFID and related systems can be understood – together with other technologies - as forerunners for AmI. From this point of view we can expect that AmI-systems will share (in addition to aspects resulting from the combination of different forerunner technologies) a number of technical, legal and social characteristics from RFID systems*. As explained in section 2.1 RFID systems* can connect an ‘Internet of Things’ that integrates autonomic computing and autonomic profiling, changing the way we relate to our environment in a radical way. In the next chapter state-of-the-art cases and prospective scenarios will be presented to provide a better picture of what such an environment may look like.
Denis Royer | 10 / 43 |