RFID Update for National Acquisitions Group Conference, York 2013

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A brief overview of changes taking place in library RFID at the moment

Transcript of RFID Update for National Acquisitions Group Conference, York 2013

RFID Update

Changes ahead for libraries? Mick Fortune

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Today I shall be mostly talking about..

• The evolving RFID landscape

– New standards

– New applications

– New concerns – privacy, vulnerabilities (and legislation?)

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But first…

How do we think of RFID?

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All of the above?

Labels?

Cards?

Asset tracking?

Self Service?

Security?

Access control?

System building block?

The story so far…

• Typical uses are:

– Access control

– Membership smartcards

– Substitute for barcodes and tattle tape

and…

not much else.

(Which is a bit like buying a smartphone and using it to make calls)

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Factors that have inhibited development

• Driven by suppliers, not librarians

• Little engagement from LMS suppliers

• Dependence on LMS has slowed development

• No agreed standards for data or frequencies has fragmented development

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13%

27%

7% 1% 3% 1% 1% 0%

47%

Data Standards in Use - Global

Danish Data Model

ISO 28560-2

ISO 28560-3

ISO 28560 (unspecified)

3M

Bibliotheca

AS/NZS1428.2

ISO 15693

DNA/Don't know

0%

10%

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30%

40%

50%

60%

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100%

Australia Canada Germany Others UK US

Data Models in Use - Global

DNA/Don't know

Bibliotheca

3M

Australian (Nat or Reg)

British

Danish

NISO (USA)

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Growth of new Applications

• New applications being developed by LMS/RFID suppliers – UK – offline circulation, stock management

– Australia - supply chain monitoring, consortia working

– US – ILL routing

• Mobile apps interacting with stock, not catalogue

• Consortia/co-operative working encouraging adoption of common standards

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A UK Initiative!

The Library Communication Framework (LCF)

• Standardises data exchange between LMS and RFID (and other 3rd party apps)

• Version 1 published at the end of September

• New collection management app (based on LCF) already in development

• Supported by LMS supplier members of BIC For more information on LCF visit http://www.bic.org.uk/e4libraries/16/INTEROPERABILITY-STANDARDS/

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Other New Standards

• ISO 28560-4 – new data standard for libraries using UHF

• NISO - SIP and NCIP

• EU Mandate M436

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New Concerns - Privacy

• RFID privacy has been a recurring concern since the technology first appeared

• In 2008 the EU published M436 to consider – Signage

– Privacy Impact Assessments (PIA)

• Libraries will be required to complete PIAs during 2014

• BIC working group details at: http://www.bic.org.uk/105/Volunteers-Needed-%28BIC-Members-Only%29/

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New Concerns - Vulnerability

• Near Field Communication (NFC) is another form of RFID operating at 13.56MHz – the same as library tags

• NFC is now appearing in many smartphones and tablets

• It is possible to use a smartphone to interrogate/alter library tags

• The industry is monitoring the problem

• We’ll keep you posted!

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Checklist for 2014

• On data standards

– All the major UK suppliers endorse and support ISO 28560-2. Consider migration.

• On interoperability

– Support the LCF for the best guarantee of future interoperability.

• On privacy

– Watch for news about M436 and NFC.

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Thank you!

e: mick@libraryrfid.co.uk w: http://www.libraryrfid.co.uk

t: +44 7786 625544 : @libraryrfid

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