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Draft Recommendation on the implementation of privacy, data protection and
information security principles in applications supported by Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID): your opinion matters!
The Public Consultation will be open for a period of eight weeks and will
finish on 25th April 2008.
You may find also a translation of the consultation in French and German.
http://ec.europa.eu/yourvoice/ipm/forms/dispatch?form=RFIDRec
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The European Commission published the Draft Recommendation on RFID Privacy and Security on the Your Voice in Europe-Platform for public consultation.
After a public consultation on RFID Privacy Issues in 2006, some conferences and workshops and various discussions on the topic within the RFID Expert Group, this publication finally represents the measures that the Commission recommends to the member states and stakeholders, in order to achieve a high level of privacy and data protection in the context of RFID applications.
EDRi welcomes this Draft Recommendation, which contains various important measures, like the recommendation that RFID reading areas as well as RFID tagged object should be marked with a clear sign indicating the presence of
(Dieser Artikel ist auch in deutscher Sprache verfügbar) The privacy problems created by the Internet and other new technologies such as RFID have an important place on the agenda of the European institutions that seem to be more anxious than ever to tackle those issues. The hearing at the European Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee reported in the last EDRi-gram seems to be only the top of the iceberg.
Article 29 working party will discuss at the next meeting, on 18 February 2008, the highly sensitive topic of privacy & search engines, and it is probable to adopt an Opinion on this topic.
But the views of the Working party's members are already public, after the last month meeting at the European Parliament. Moreover, Peter Schaar,
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The nominees and winners of the Dutch Big Brother Awards 2007 showed it clearly: a proper level of data protection in The Netherlands cannot be taken for granted. A number of big projects and ongoing legislative efforts threaten the state of data protection in the Netherlands. The government shows no signs of taking critics seriously. The disinterest of the public and ease with which a majority of Dutch citizens are willing to hand over their privacy for a promise of security, led the jury of the Big Brother Awards declare the Dutch citizen the winner. Other winners were the plans for an Electronic Child Dossier, the National Railways for the RFID transit card system and De Nederlandsche
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In the context of increasing debates in the European Union over the RFID policy, Peter Hustinx, the European Data Protection Supevisor (EDPS), published on 20 December 2007 his opinion on the growing use of RFID chips in consumer products and other new applications affecting individuals.
EDPS published this opinion as a response to the European Commission's communication on Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) in Europe that was released in March 2007, but taking into consideration other actions, such as the creation by the EC of the RFID expert group, where EDRi is a member.
Peter Hustinx, explained the role of RFID and its relation with the privacy issues: "RFID systems could play a key role in the development of
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Following the the EDRi statements on RFID Privacy Issues and RFID Security Issues published earlier this year, EDRi recently contributed with a third written statement to the European Commission's RFID Expert Group focusing on RFID and Informed Consent.
In this paper, EDRi deals with the possibilities of informing individuals about RFID use and strongly asks for a strict opt-in regime for RFID usage. Furthermore various mechanisms for removing, altering or disabling RFID functionality are discussed and evaluated with respect to the protection of personal data.
Finally, EDRi suggests a concept of responsibilities to ensure that RFID technology is only disseminated to organisations that
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Last week the conference "On RFID", organised by the Portuguese Presidency with support of the European Commission DG Information Society, took place in Lisbon. During the one and a half days of the conference a number of topics were discussed, that could be crucial for the future development of RFID technology.
Privacy and security were the topics of a panel discussion held during the morning of the first day. The participants in this discussion, representatives of industry, consumer, data protection and international organisations, all shared the opinion that security and privacy by design is the proper way for advancements of RFID technology. As Reinhard Posch, representative of the European Network and Information Security Agency
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On 1 November 2007, registration offices throughout Germany will begin collecting fingerprints from all citizens wishing to travel. Two years after the storage of a facial image on an RFID chip has been introduced, the project of full biometric registration of the whole population continues. Germany's Chaos Computer Club (CCC) points out once more that the ePassport has risks and side-effects, which particularly affect senior citizens.
Many older people will have problems giving fingerprints. Experience as well as international and German studies show that considerably more than 10% of all senior citizens must expect to have no recordable fingerprints. This will inevitably expose them to discrimination through