RFID security and privacy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
RFID security and privacy
(Synthesis lectures on information security, privacy, and trust, #7)
Morgan & Claypool, c2014
- : pbk
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Note
Including bibliographical references (p. 127-139) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
As a fast-evolving new area, RFID security and privacy has quickly grown from a hungry infant to an energetic teenager during recent years. Much of the exciting development in this area is summarized in this book with rigorous analyses and insightful comments. In particular, a systematic overview on RFID security and privacy is provided at both the physical and network level. At the physical level, RFID security means that RFID devices should be identified with assurance in the presence of attacks, while RFID privacy requires that RFID devices should be identified without disclosure of any valuable information about the devices. At the network level, RFID security means that RFID information should be shared with authorized parties only, while RFID privacy further requires that RFID information should be shared without disclosure of valuable RFID information to any honest-but-curious server which coordinates information sharing. Not only does this book summarize the past, but it also provides new research results, especially at the network level. Several future directions are envisioned to be promising for advancing the research in this area.
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
RFID Security at the Physical Level
RFID Privacy at the Physical Level
RFID Security at the Network Level
RFID Privacy at the Network Level
Summary and Future Directions
Bibliography
Authors' Biographies
by "Nielsen BookData"