RFID Can Be Snooped from Surprising Distances

Bill Ray

The Register

RFID tags can be read at a surprising range, a researcher has found.

When he’s not listening in to GSM phone calls, Chris Paget has been busy seeing at what distance an RFID tag can be read, managing a respectable 217 feet.

Paget also reckons the US military could read an EPC Gen2 tag from 80 miles off, though the connection would likely time out before any data was retrieved. Which is a shame as his calculations put the theoretical maximum read range at 317 miles, if you’ve got a big enough dish.

Generation 2 tags aren’t what we use in credit cards, or NFC-equipped phones, at least not yet. EPC Gen2 tags don’t rely on magnetic induction for power and can thus be read at a much greater distance making them ideal for packaging and product labels, and the US Passport Card, among other things.

As Paget explains in his report (pdf) Gen2 readers are more akin to radar in that they send out a radio signal (around 900MHz) and listen to the reflection which comes encoded with the tag’s identification code, which is created using the power of the radio signal. So increase the power of the signal and you can increase the read range, though signals that don’t make it back within 100 microseconds get discarded: providing a theoretical cap of about 10 miles.

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