By Rhea Wessel
Oct. 19, 2006—Members of the RFID community in Europe reacted positively after the
European Union (EU) released preliminary results of a six-month consultation process earlier this week. According to these results, privacy concerns top the list of worries about the emerging technology.
The online consultation process was announced seven months ago at the
CeBIT trade fair in Hanover, Germany (see
EC Takes RFID Survey, Schedules Final Conference), and ended on Sept. 30 with a record number of responses: 2,190. Germany had the most respondents, accounting for 43 percent of the total, with France making up 24 percent. All EU member states were represented in the survey of citizens, manufacturers, systems integrators, academic and scientific institutions and public bodies.
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Viviane Reding
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Speaking to members of the European Parliament and guests—including Robert Cresanti, the
U.S. Department of Commerce undersecretary for technology—at a conference in Brussels on Monday, Viviane Reding, commissioner of the
EU Information Society, said the consultation process shows clearly that a large majority of people "are willing to be convinced that RFID can bring benefits, but they want to be reassured that it will not compromise their privacy."
Preliminary results indicate that nearly half of all respondents believe privacy-enhancing technologies should be mandatory in RFID applications, while 61 percent feel an RFID tag attached to products sold in retail stores should be automatically de-activated at the point of sale.
Peter Gabriel, a spokesperson for the Germany-based
Coordinating European Efforts for Promoting the European RFID Value Chain (CE RFID) industry group, says he was surprised at the high number of respondents. Gabriel expects the final results of the survey to be a long time in coming, given the high response rate. CE RFID was formed in May and held its inaugural gathering in September (
CE RFID Holds Its First Meeting). The organization urged members to participate in the consultation.
Gabriel says the EU is asking the right questions—what should we do about data protection, and do we need frequency and data standards? Sixty-four percent of those who responded to questions on frequency spectrum said current regulations are sufficient for the initial deployment of UHF RFID, but not once the technology becomes ubiquitous.