Re: RFID Test Class

2009-09-29 Thread Todd Glassey
psuger wrote: Dear colleagues, I am a member of a lead user project planning to run real live RFID use tests. This test intends to use the [RFC 5395] Private Use 0xFFF0, 65520 Class as PERFID (for Provisional Experimentation RFID) since there is no Experimentation Classes assigned. Mssr

RFID Test Class

2009-09-24 Thread psuger
Dear colleagues, I am a member of a lead user project planning to run real live RFID use tests. This test intends to use the [RFC 5395] Private Use 0xFFF0, 65520 Class as PERFID (for Provisional Experimentation RFID) since there is no Experimentation Classes assigned. I wished to know if the use

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Eric Rescorla
at registration) without going through this kind of review, but given that there has historically been quite a bit of concern about the about the privacy implications of this sort of RFID tagging (see, for instance, the issue of RFID tags in passports) and that several people have raised concerns about

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Ole Jacobsen
is about 18 inches. In having these discussions we've probably highlighted a number of *potential* risks much more than what the average credit card or cell phone customer is informed of. I suppose we could do what the Fastrak people did when they sent me the RFID gizmo for bridge tolls

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Stephane Bortzmeyer
On Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 12:05:25AM -0700, Ole Jacobsen o...@cisco.com wrote a message of 53 lines which said: I am sure the organizers never expected this amount of feedback either, They don't know the IETF, then :-) They can expect a lot of feedback on sushi and cookies, too.

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Scott Brim
So far this has been an interesting experiment in trying to have an experiment within the IETF culture. ___ Ietf mailing list Ietf@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Steven M. Bellovin
I'm with Eric on this. Part of our dog food is a decent regard for security and privacy; we shouldn't neglect in the name of experimentation. ___ Ietf mailing list Ietf@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Ole Jacobsen
Neither privacy/security nor discussion of such is being neglected or discouraged. That's part of the experiment too. Ole Ole J. Jacobsen Editor and Publisher, The Internet Protocol Journal Cisco Systems Tel: +1 408-527-8972 Mobile: +1 415-370-4628 E-mail: o...@cisco.com URL:

Re: IASA Experiments and responsibilities (was: Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima)

2009-09-14 Thread Donald Eastlake
John, I can back most of your statement and the things you do but that below is just absolutely absurd. The RFID badge thing originated in the HOST not in IASA. It is entirely within normal facilities arrangement and negotiation to use pre-existing badge arrangements, particularly where

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Scott Brim
negatives, unless JoeBob decides to sue us for making him look like a doofus. Now let's presume that some people remember (and that some other people don't remember) JoeBob being in the room during the discussion, but IETFs RFID tracker log shows that JoeBob was hanging out with me in the bar

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Scott Brim
Excerpts from Eric Rescorla on Sun, Sep 13, 2009 11:09:31PM -0700: At Sun, 13 Sep 2009 21:19:53 -0700 (PDT), Ole Jacobsen wrote: Eric, The local hosts are reading the messages on this list and will take appropriate steps including: * Not displaying the ID number -- attendee

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Scott Brim
Excerpts from Ole Jacobsen on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 12:05:25AM -0700: I suppose we could do what the Fastrak people did when they sent me the RFID gizmo for bridge tolls: They included a foil-lined bag and explained that the system was being used to monitor traffic (as well as collect tolls

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread David Conrad
Eric, On Sep 13, 2009, at 11:09 PM, Eric Rescorla wrote: As Richard and I have both indicated, however, this system seems to have substantial residual privacy risk, even if the identifiers are assigned completely unpredictably (and note that non-sequential and unpredictable are not at all the

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Marshall Eubanks
be good to see how good they (plus the holders you can buy) really are. Also, since the RFID readers can be bought easily (they're probably at Fry's), I would hope to hear of some good hack uses of this technology. Regards Marshall I think it's fair to say that the people running

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Marc Petit-Huguenin
should be sufficient, but it might be good to see how good they (plus the holders you can buy) really are. Also, since the RFID readers can be bought easily (they're probably at Fry's), I would hope to hear of some good hack uses of this technology. I worked on RFID readers last year as part

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Alissa Cooper
On Sep 10, 2009, at 3:23 PM, Ole Jacobsen wrote: Data rentention --- The data collected in this experiment will only be used for basic statistical purposes. Since there is a blue-sheet component to this experiment it will be useful to compare the real bluesheet data with the

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Ole Jacobsen
It means that the data will be deleted at the end of the expiriment once the analysis is done. Educated guess: within 30 days of the end of the meeting, I know how busy the folkds running the meeting are. The bluesheets, on the other hand, are retained. There is no need to retain this data

Re: IASA Experiments and responsibilities (was: Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima)

2009-09-14 Thread John C Klensin
--On Monday, September 14, 2009 10:06 -0400 Donald Eastlake d3e...@gmail.com wrote: John, I can back most of your statement and the things you do but that below is just absolutely absurd. The RFID badge thing originated in the HOST not in IASA. It is entirely within normal facilities

Re: IASA Experiments and responsibilities (was: Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima)

2009-09-14 Thread John C Klensin
of the experiment, without any signs of being willing to entertain the null hypothesis of maybe this isn't a good idea without time and resources for more consideration and openness. ... Just to be clear, the IAOC did not initiate the RFID experiment, and you are correct that the community did not ask

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Dean Willis
(and/or their sponsors) are not without liability in today's unfortunately litigious world. By making the results available, we have made some level of express or implied warranty about those results. There may also be some liability toward the experimental subjects (those of us with RFID tags

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-14 Thread Dean Willis
On Sep 14, 2009, at 12:41 PM, Ole Jacobsen wrote: It means that the data will be deleted at the end of the expiriment once the analysis is done. Educated guess: within 30 days of the end of the meeting, I know how busy the folkds running the meeting are. The bluesheets, on the other hand, are

Re: IASA Experiments and responsibilities (was: Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima)

2009-09-14 Thread Ole Jacobsen
that the T-shirts may contain chemicals you are allergic too, there is even a risk that you could get mugged in Hiroshima (althought my personal estimate is that you are about 100 times less likely to experience that as compared to say, Chicago). The risk that (somehow) the RFID cards will/can

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-13 Thread Eric Rescorla
At Fri, 11 Sep 2009 07:57:02 -0700 (PDT), Ole Jacobsen wrote: Inline. On Fri, 11 Sep 2009, Eric Rescorla wrote: At Thu, 10 Sep 2009 12:23:31 -0700 (PDT), * Each attendee will be issued an RFID card at the registration desk. The information stored on the card is ONLY a number

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-13 Thread Dean Willis
showing up for the first ten minutes of each meeting I chair, replacing myself with an inflatable dummy, and then going off to the bar. It would be revealing that I'm too stupid to remove my RFID tag and attach it to the dummy, and that would be a blow to my professional credibility

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-13 Thread joel jaeggli
Eric Rescorla wrote: At Fri, 11 Sep 2009 07:57:02 -0700 (PDT), Ole Jacobsen wrote: Inline. On Fri, 11 Sep 2009, Eric Rescorla wrote: At Thu, 10 Sep 2009 12:23:31 -0700 (PDT), * Each attendee will be issued an RFID card at the registration desk. The information stored on the card

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-13 Thread Richard Barnes
This brings us to the question of the identifiers: it's certainly true that systems which are anonymous but linkable offer a higher level of privacy than those which do not. However, it's often possible to determine which identifier a given person has (e.g., by observing a specific persons card

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-13 Thread Ole Jacobsen
Eric, The local hosts are reading the messages on this list and will take appropriate steps including: * Not displaying the ID number -- attendee mapping anywhere * Not assigning numbers sequencially Again, anyone may opt out, but this IS an experiment and it is certainly hoped that people

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-13 Thread Ole Jacobsen
for the first ten minutes of each meeting I chair, replacing myself with an inflatable dummy, and then going off to the bar. It would be revealing that I'm too stupid to remove my RFID tag and attach it to the dummy, and that would be a blow to my professional credibility. Seriously, it does

IASA Experiments and responsibilities (was: Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima)

2009-09-13 Thread John C Klensin
of RFID experiment is a policy matter. Another portion, perhaps overlapping, believes that a version of the eat our own dogfood principle says that we should set an example by utilizing RFID only properly and with due consideration. Some of that group believes that properly and with due

Re: IASA Experiments and responsibilities (was: Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima)

2009-09-13 Thread Ole Jacobsen
a real stretch to link this to any BCP, RFC or IASA founding document, but please don't read this as saying that your questions aren't worth considering and/or answering. (But, as an individual IAOC member I won't be doing that here). Just to be clear, the IAOC did not initiate the RFID experiment

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-11 Thread Eric Rescorla
At Thu, 10 Sep 2009 12:23:31 -0700 (PDT), Ole Jacobsen wrote: An Overview of the RFID Experiment for IETF 76 in Hiroshima. Some of the details are still being worked out, but here is a summary: Basics -- * Each

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-11 Thread Ole Jacobsen
Inline. On Fri, 11 Sep 2009, Eric Rescorla wrote: At Thu, 10 Sep 2009 12:23:31 -0700 (PDT), * Each attendee will be issued an RFID card at the registration desk. The information stored on the card is ONLY a number, no personal data is stored on the card. (Note: the attendee can

Re: Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-11 Thread Joel Jaeggli
Ole Jacobsen wrote: Inline. On Fri, 11 Sep 2009, Eric Rescorla wrote: At Thu, 10 Sep 2009 12:23:31 -0700 (PDT), * Each attendee will be issued an RFID card at the registration desk. The information stored on the card is ONLY a number, no personal data is stored on the card

Some more background on the RFID experiment in Hiroshima

2009-09-10 Thread Ole Jacobsen
An Overview of the RFID Experiment for IETF 76 in Hiroshima. Some of the details are still being worked out, but here is a summary: Basics -- * Each attendee will be issued an RFID card at the registration desk

RE: [Sipping] Names of People Encoded On RFID Cards

2008-11-17 Thread DRAGE, Keith (Keith)
@ietf.org; Omer Boyaci; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [Sipping] Names of People Encoded On RFID Cards Names of people attending SIP / SIPPING who requested before noon Saturday were encoded in NYC and handed to Omer Boyaci [EMAIL PROTECTED]. The names are located here : http

Names of People Encoded On RFID Cards

2008-11-16 Thread Athar Shiraz Siddiqui
Names of people attending SIP / SIPPING who requested before noon Saturday were encoded in NYC and handed to Omer Boyaci [EMAIL PROTECTED]. The names are located here : http://groups.google.com/group/ietfrfid/files You dont need to login but if its inconvenient email me to request status of your

Re: Who Wants an RFID Badge for the Upcoming IETF Conference?

2008-11-14 Thread Andrew G. Malis
I just added my name to the database. What I would REALLY like is to just have my badge scanned when I enter a meeting room instead of signing a blue sheet. Cheers, Andy On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 10:39 PM, Athar Shiraz Siddiqui [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Dr. Henning has asked us to install a system

Re: Who Wants an RFID Badge for the Upcoming IETF Conference?

2008-11-14 Thread Fred Baker
On Nov 14, 2008, at 7:36 AM, Andrew G. Malis wrote: I just added my name to the database. What I would REALLY like is to just have my badge scanned when I enter a meeting room instead of signing a blue sheet. That would have required Henning and/or Athar to coordinate with the Secretariat

Re: Who Wants an RFID Badge for the Upcoming IETF Conference?

2008-11-14 Thread Henning Schulzrinne
We've thought about the blue sheet replacement, but wanted to start a bit smaller and reduce the impact of failure. (With the current experiment, presumably the worst-case outcome is no worse than what we've had for the past 70+ IETFs, but losing blue sheet information might make some

Who Wants an RFID Badge for the Upcoming IETF Conference?

2008-11-13 Thread Athar Shiraz Siddiqui
Dr. Henning has asked us to install a system which will help participants identify themselves with their name and affiliation. If you want to know more about the raison d'ĂȘtre for the project please view this presentation (see[1]). Briefly: the purpose of the badge is to permit people (with

Re: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-28 Thread Fred Baker
On Tuesday, March 27, 2007 02:42:19 PM -0700 Andy Bierman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: There are so many Process Wonks in the IETF who feel it is their sworn duty to yell State your name please! I guess I am one of those process wonks. In the PCN meeting last week, I was taking notes, a feed-in

RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Andrew G. Malis
RFID would be a great way to replace the blue sheets as well - put an RFID reader at the door of each meeting room. Embed the chip in the name tag so you don't need to remember to bring anything else from your hotel room in the morning. Cheers, Andy On Mon, 26 Mar 2007, Schliesser, Benson

RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Eric Gray (LO/EUS)
Morris Cc: ietf@ietf.org Subject: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic) RFID would be a great way to replace the blue sheets as well - put an RFID reader at the door of each meeting room. Embed the chip in the name tag so you don't need to remember

Re: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Andrew G. Malis
Eric, Why not? We each already receive a unique identifier when we register for the meeting - all the RFID tag needs to contain is that identifier, no personal info is required. There could also be an opt-in locator service to let other attendees look up what meeting room you're in at that time

RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Eric Gray (LO/EUS)
with the tendency to forget to identify yourself at the mike. So, we get a nice RFID protective wallet and - remembering how absent minded we are - we keep our name tags (with all of our other RFID badges, and passes) in that protective wallet. As a result, unless you need to get it out to get

RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Hallam-Baker, Phillip
thinking to use them at a movable feast like the IETF. From: Andrew G. Malis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 10:55 AM To: David Morris Cc: ietf@ietf.org Subject: RFID (was: identifying yourself

RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Eric Gray (LO/EUS)
From: Schliesser, Benson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 12:27 PM To: Eric Gray (LO/EUS) Cc: ietf@ietf.org Subject: RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic) Importance: High Eric

RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Schliesser, Benson
. Cheers, -Benson From: Eric Gray (LO/EUS) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 5:49 PM To: Schliesser, Benson Cc: ietf@ietf.org Subject: RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic

RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Schliesser, Benson
Eric- It sounds like your argument is: We're too incompetent to say our names at the mic, so we're probably too incompetent to use a RFID system. Did I get that right? While I'm certainly not going to defend the competence of every IETF participant, I don't find much merit in that argument

Re: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Steven M. Bellovin
On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 11:27:29 -0500 Schliesser, Benson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Eric- It sounds like your argument is: We're too incompetent to say our names at the mic, so we're probably too incompetent to use a RFID system. Did I get that right? While I'm certainly not going to defend

RE: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Schliesser, Benson
Steven M. Bellovin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Schliesser, Benson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On the other hand, I am amused by your idea of scanning the streets for RFID responses that look like IETF-badges. Then my robot army could track down and kill all IETF participants whom oppose

Re: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Andy Bierman
Schliesser, Benson wrote: Eric- It sounds like your argument is: We're too incompetent to say our names at the mic, so we're probably too incompetent to use a RFID system. Did I get that right? This sounds like a Rube Goldberg joke, not a serious thread. Could we possibly find a more

Re: RFID (was: identifying yourself at the mic)

2007-03-27 Thread Jeffrey Hutzelman
On Tuesday, March 27, 2007 02:42:19 PM -0700 Andy Bierman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: There are so many Process Wonks in the IETF who feel it is their sworn duty to yell State your name please! I think it's unfair to call people who do that process wonks or any other derogatory term. Most

Re: RFID

2007-03-27 Thread Andy Bierman
Jeffrey Hutzelman wrote: On Tuesday, March 27, 2007 02:42:19 PM -0700 Andy Bierman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: There are so many Process Wonks in the IETF who feel it is their sworn duty to yell State your name please! I think it's unfair to call people who do that process wonks or any

Re: RFID

2007-03-27 Thread Jeffrey Hutzelman
On Tuesday, March 27, 2007 03:51:56 PM -0700 Andy Bierman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonk_%28slang%29 According to wikipedia, a policy wonk is someone knowledgeable about and fascinated by details of government policy and programs If that is derogatory then I'm

Re: RFID

2007-03-27 Thread Andy Bierman
Jeffrey Hutzelman wrote: On Tuesday, March 27, 2007 03:51:56 PM -0700 Andy Bierman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonk_%28slang%29 According to wikipedia, a policy wonk is someone knowledgeable about and fascinated by details of government policy and programs If

Re: RFID

2007-03-27 Thread Marshall Eubanks
Speaking as a frequent scribe, I consider it good manners for speakers to identify themselves, even if they are well known. Regards Marshall On Mar 27, 2007, at 8:10 PM, Andy Bierman wrote: Jeffrey Hutzelman wrote: On Tuesday, March 27, 2007 03:51:56 PM -0700 Andy Bierman [EMAIL

RE: RFID

2007-03-27 Thread Hallam-Baker, Phillip
: Marshall Eubanks [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 8:49 PM To: Andy Bierman Cc: ietf@ietf.org; Jeffrey Hutzelman Subject: Re: RFID Speaking as a frequent scribe, I consider it good manners for speakers to identify themselves, even if they are well known. Regards

Re: RFID

2007-03-27 Thread Sam Hartman
Andy == Andy Bierman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Andy I find it rather annoying to listen to the constant Andy interruptions, reminding people of the process. The only Andy reasons for such an interruption are: Andy 1) it is very important to you that detailed and accurate

Re: RFID

2007-03-27 Thread Philip Guenther
On Mar 27, 2007, at 8:10 PM, Andy Bierman wrote: ... I find it rather annoying to listen to the constant interruptions, reminding people of the process. The only reasons for such an interruption are: ... 2) you plan to base your opinion of the imminent comment on either who says it or

Re: RFID

2007-03-27 Thread Andy Bierman
Philip Guenther wrote: On Mar 27, 2007, at 8:10 PM, Andy Bierman wrote: ... I find it rather annoying to listen to the constant interruptions, reminding people of the process. The only reasons for such an interruption are: ... 2) you plan to base your opinion of the imminent comment on

RFID mailing list announcement

2004-11-15 Thread Scott Barvick
I'm writing to announce the opening of the [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list as the next step towards the formation of an IETF Working Group that would develop open standards for scalable, multi(air)-protocol Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) reader control and data acquisition operations

Re: RFID mailing list announcement

2004-11-15 Thread Daniel Park
In 61st IETF meeting, a new BOF as IPv6 over 802.15.4 (ZigBee) was held and many guys were of interest. I am wondering of what explicit issues are available arounding RFID against previous work. Please let me know it if I am missing anything.--- Original Message ---Sender : Scott

Re: RFID mailing list announcement

2004-11-15 Thread Scott Barvick
Daniel, I wasn't at the BoF so if I understand your question correctly, ZigBee and RFID are very different solutions for very different applications - remote monitoring, control, sensory applications vs. automatic identification (at the highest level). As such, the standardization around

RFID and EPCglobal

2003-11-20 Thread Richard Shockey
At 08:45 AM 11/20/2003, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Besides what Bill Manning said about reviewing what's been done in the auto-id center (now closed), there are a number of research projects/initiatives around the world (e.g., Japan's ubiquitous id center at uidcenter.org). For a list of some

Re: RFID and EPCglobal

2003-11-20 Thread Michael Mealling
On Thu, 2003-11-20 at 10:52, Richard Shockey wrote: EPCglobal is focusing on the standards though I suspect there are aspects of the protocols being discussed that should come to the IETF or IEEE for proper peer review and/or standardization. There is an extensive discussion of the use of