GCN Home > 09/11/06 issue
Gen 2: Sowing UHF Tags Worldwide
By David Essex, Special to GCN
In December 2004, EPC Global, the association that sets standards for bar codes and RFID tags, issued its second-generation UHF standard, Class 1 Gen 2. It unifies the air-interface protocols readers use to communicate with tags. Proponents predict it will speed development of cheaper hardware and spread UHF technology worldwide.
Gen 2 also:
- Provides four communication speeds that maximize throughput of multiple tag reads under adverse conditions, and under strict regulations in Europe and Asia. The previous generations one-size-fits-all speed didnt adapt as well to varying conditions. Gen 2 nearly quadruples the number of possible tag reads per second.
- Improves reading of tags at the edge of transmission range.
- Expands tag ID size from 96 to 512 bits, though users are experimenting with tags that hold hundreds of kilobits, industry sources said.
- Introduces a dense-reader mode that improves read rates of multiple readers in close proximity.
- Tightens security by raising the number of bits available in passwords for deactivating tags from 8 to 32 bits; allowing tags to generate hard-to-crack, 16-bit random numbers; and scrambling reader signals to make it virtually impossible for intruders to read tag numbers, said EPC Global.
In the future, systems such as larger-memory tags, better security and battery-backed active tags with sensors will be possible through planned Class 2 and 3 updates, according to the organization.

Critics supporting competing HF cards insist, however, that Gen 2 still doesnt support the encryption and random numbers needed for secure passwords.

More news on related topics: Communications / Networks, Mobile & Wireless, Authentication / Identity Management
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