[MLB-WIRELESS] FW: [eclectika] there goes the cash economy
Tracey.Simon at csiro.au
Tracey.Simon at csiro.au
Fri Jul 11 14:28:59 EST 2003
Euro Scheme Makes Money Talk By Janis Mara
Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,59565,00.html
02:00 AM Jul. 09, 2003 PT
Euro cash could be embedded with radio frequency identification tags if
a reported deal between the European Central Bank and Hitachi becomes
reality.
The bank is working on a hush-hush project to embed RFIDs, wireless
transponders the size of a grain of sand, into the fibers of euro bank
notes to foil would-be counterfeiters. The bills currently have a
number of security marks, including threads that glow under ultraviolet
light, but as the euros wear thin, these are less perceptible.
If the deal goes through, it will be a boon to the nascent RFID
industry, which has long been in search of a market. However, consumer
privacy advocates have questions about other possible uses of the tags.
A spokesman for the ECB in Frankfurt confirmed on July 4 that the bank
intends to add further protection to the euro and that the next series
will incorporate updated features, "because technology is advancing
rapidly and you have to keep pace with that."
The spokesman, Jean Rodriguez, stopped short of identifying the new
features or their makers, saying all contracts with third parties are
subject to strict confidentiality agreements.
A Hitachi spokesman acknowledged awareness of the ECB project, but said
his company was under a nondisclosure agreement and could not confirm
whether Hitachi would provide RFID chips for the bank, which released 8
billion euros in January 2002. The deadline for the project has been
reported as 2005.
Privacy groups have expressed concerns about the use of RFIDs, both in
bank notes and other areas. Earlier this year, an announcement that
Italian clothing manufacturer Benetton Group would use the chips to
track its garments set off a firestorm of media coverage and a
threatened boycott due to concerns about consumers' privacy. Benetton
retracted its plans.
If embedded in the euro, the chips could make it possible to track
information such as when and where transactions take place, according
to Paul Lee of Deloitte Research in London.
RFID technology involves a minuscule chip and antenna, which would be
implanted in the bank notes, and a reader similar to those used with
bar codes, only much smaller, Lee said. Though it might be used simply
to identify the note's serial number, it would also be possible to add
more data.
"There is a worry in our field as to how these things will be used,
given the lack of coherent privacy regulations," said Dan Moniz, staff
technologist for San Francisco's Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
digital watchdog organization.
"It would be easy to establish a system where intelligence agencies
track how money is spent. What if I'm an ethnic Turk in Germany, where
there is a long-standing conflict between the Turkish and German
populations, and I buy books on establishing a Turkish state?" Moniz
asked.
"The German police could start tracking me. If I go to France or
another country that is part of the 12 member nations using the euro,
the German police could notify the French police, and they could keep
track of me," Moniz said. The 12 nations that use the euro are Italy,
Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Germany,
France, Finland, Belgium and Austria.
Until now, Moniz pointed out, the only truly anonymous form of payment
has been cash. "If you write a check, the instrument itself bears your
name and other data. Credit cards have an obvious audit trail;
traveler's checks have one as well. But always, until now, cash
payments have been mostly untraceable."
Another leading privacy advocate is also concerned about the
information being collected in databases and used for marketing
purposes -- or even lawsuits, health insurance applications and law
enforcement.
"This private data can be used against you," said Katherine Albrecht,
founder and director of Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion
and Numbering. Albrecht said she shares EFF's concerns. "It will
essentially eliminate the anonymity of cash." She outlined a nightmare
scenario in which "it would be possible to track all the cash issued to
an individual and invalidate it with a couple of keystrokes" -- a
literal case of "your cash is trash."
Despite the reputed deal between the ECB and Hitachi initially reported
by Japanese news agency Kyodo, technical difficulties may forestall the
use of the tags in the euro.
"A bank note is very thin," said Bodo Ischebeck, senior director of
Ident-Systems at Infineon Technologies in Munich. "Bank notes have a
thickness of only about 80 microns, and the technology is only capable,
if you are connected to an antenna and have a chip on the bottom, at
100 microns." The paper would have to be 100 microns thick, Ischebeck
said, to support the technology.
Also, Ischebeck said, the wear and tear bank notes undergo, such as
accidentally being put through the washing machine or sitting for hours
in the sun, is "not semiconductor-friendly."
Infineon conducted several research projects about a year ago on the
feasibility of including semiconductors in bank notes, Ischebeck said,
though he would not confirm whether the ECB project was one of them.
The Auto-ID Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
estimated that RFID tags cost from 20 cents to $1. This would make the
tags impractical for use in denominations lower than 200 and 500 euros,
worth roughly $200 and $500, respectively.
Though the EFF's Moniz said he has no doubt the ECB is implanting RFIDs
in euros simply to thwart counterfeiting and money laundering, "it's
not a one-use technology. It opens the door to other things. We need to
examine the possible scenarios and what we can do about them. Society
needs to have a debate about this."
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