Unlike traditional RFID tags, which are known for their size, cost, and susceptibility to counterfeiting, MIT stated in its press release that this innovative cryptographic chip utilizes terahertz ...
ID verification tags aren’t much use if someone can just peel them off and stick them to a fake product. MIT scientists have now designed ID tags that use the glue itself as a kind of fingerprint, and ...
AeroScout, Inc., the market leader in the field of Wi-Fi based Active RFID solutions, today announced a partnership with Alanco to develop and deliver a 2.4 GHz real-time location solution (RTLS) for ...
A cryptographic tag uses terahertz waves to authenticate items by recognizing the unique pattern of microscopic metal particles that are mixed into the glue that sticks the tag to the item's surface.
RSI ID Technologies’ announced this morning its new tamper-evident RFID tags feature special components and properties, which provide the tags with their unique characteristics. The manufacturer of ...
Bluvision has released a new beacon product known as the BEEKs Mini Tamper Proof Tag that is small, relatively low in cost and designed to issue an alert in the event that anyone attempts to remove it ...
The anti-tampering tag is about 4 square millimetres in size. (Image: news.mit.edu) Tiny, Tamper-proof ID Tag: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) engineers in the USA have developed a unique ...
(Nanowerk News) A few years ago, MIT researchers invented a cryptographic ID tag that is several times smaller and significantly cheaper than the traditional radio frequency tags (RFIDs) that are ...
After passing through the tag and striking the object’s surface, terahertz waves are reflected, or backscattered, to a receiver for authentication. A few years ago, MIT researchers invented a ...
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