Delta Air Invests $25 Million in RFID for Luggage 206
securitas writes "The New York Times' Barnaby Feder reports on Delta Air Lines' plans to invest $25 million in RFID luggage tracking hardware and software over the next two years. This sounds very similar to the Jacksonville Airport RFID plan. McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas and Hong Kong International Airport have also announced plans to use RFID technology in their operations. More at the Cincinnati Enquirer and the Boston Globe."
Cue "What about my privacy!?!?!" complaints here (Score:2, Insightful)
The ones that go along with any mention of RFID, and drown out legitimate concerns.
Re:Cue "What about my privacy!?!?!" complaints her (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cue "What about my privacy!?!?!" complaints her (Score:4, Funny)
(Yes, I'm being silly. They can't do it in planes. That's what check-in lounges are for.)
Re:Cue "What about my privacy!?!?!" complaints her (Score:2, Funny)
Do these people not think the issues through?
Privacy Concerns arent legit? (Score:2)
Sure paranoids tend to be extreme, but it doesnt mean they arent correct, and often ahead of the curve.
Re:Cue "What about my privacy!?!?!" complaints her (Score:4, Insightful)
Most of the concerns I've read about the use of RFID tags have been about:
1) Persistence - the tags last as long as you have the item they are attached to and can be difficult to find or remove. Not an issue here. The article states in the very first sentence that the tags are disposable. They are also likely to be mounted in a clearly visible manner.
2) Surreptitious - the tags can be read without the knowledge of the person holding them. Not really an issue here because the tags are attached to baggage that the customer is not going to be carrying with him.
Do try to understand the issues before you discount them as "tinfoil-hat ideas".
Re:Cue "What about my privacy!?!?!" complaints her (Score:3, Informative)
I think that any such complaints would be unfounded.
The article makes it clear that Delta is looking into RFID as replacement technology for (or maybe companion technology to) Barcodes for Airline-supplied luggage tracking systems. Every piece of luggage that leaves the check-in desk has a luggage tag on it supplied by the carrier / airport. This is not new. There is no increased erosion of privacy here.
I think it is safe to assume that such tags are as temporary as the current Paper ones that they
Re:Cue "What about my privacy!?!?!" complaints her (Score:3, Interesting)
I do, too - but we're hoping for the best. Other posts wrongly ASSume that all RFID tags within consumer goods will be as easily removed...
The potential for abuse is obviously greater than barcodes, which are (duh) visible. Many, many fears about this technology would be alleviated if the presence of RFID tags was not surrepitious. Instead of treating all customers like dolts, let's
Re:Cue "What about my privacy!?!?!" complaints her (Score:3, Funny)
Considering how LITTLE privacy we have in airports these days anyway, I'd rather take a little assurance that my drawers will make it on the plane after the security guards are done sniffing them.
ticket&rfid (Score:3, Interesting)
What about the Swiss who have the "Abonnement General" ?
Will they have to pre-order these ?
Now that's the first Good idea for RFID I've seen (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Now that's the first Good idea for RFID I've se (Score:2, Funny)
I'd say. They actually let you bring your penis mightier to work?
well, what do i trade for what (Score:4, Interesting)
or do i prefer not having it lost every third flight across the atlantic and taking no responsibility for it?
hmm...
Re:well, what do i trade for what (Score:4, Interesting)
Or something like that. It's pretty cool if you ask me: Get more efficient and we're all better off; no security nonsense worries here.
Re:well, what do i trade for what (Score:3, Funny)
Real Airport Security Personell [tm] would use grep for that.
Re:well, what do i trade for what (Score:5, Funny)
Amazing! That's the same RFID as I have on MY luggage.
Goblin
Depends on the contract (Score:4, Funny)
In other words, they still lose your luggage, but somtimes find it. Sorry sir your luggage was rerouted to Antarctica, we know where it is, but a polar bear is hoarding all of the luggage from light 456 at this moment. ***I know, there are no polar bears in antarctica, but you get the picture.
Re:well, what do i trade for what (Score:2)
Per airport (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Per airport (Score:5, Informative)
This technology is a major improvement for baggage handling. Currently if a passenger disappears between checkin and departure, the plane cannot leave with their luggage on board. This proceedure predates recent security improvements. The baggage people have to dig through all of the bagage on the plane to find and remove that one bag. With a directional RFID detector, this is infinitely better. It will result in less delay and subsequently less cost to the passengers.
RFID is only a privacy concern if it used badly. The same applies to just about anything. A
Re:Per airport (Score:4, Interesting)
Currently if a passenger disappears between checkin and departure, the plane cannot leave with their luggage on board. This proceedure predates recent security improvements.
In theory, that's true. In practice, I can tell you it isn't. A year and a half ago, I had to cancel the second half of a two-part flight and drive instead. So when I landed, I told a gate attendant that I wouldn't be getting on my next flight (for which I was already checked through), and I'd need my baggage pulled. She phoned down and put in a request, along with a description of my baggage. A couple of hours later, they told me that my baggage had gone on without me, because they were too busy to get it.
More recently, the plane for second leg of a trip never showed up, so instead of flying me to San Jose, they flew me to San Francisco. They happily put my luggage on the next plane to San Jose though, even though they knew I wasn't on it.
Gives you a great sense of confidence, doesn't it?
Re:Per airport (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Per airport (Score:3, Insightful)
Great. So all a terrorist has to do is politely ask that their bag be pulled in order to have confidence that it won't? I feel so much better now.
Re:Per airport (Score:5, Informative)
Having worked in this industry, reading the current tag is a big pain. If you get an 80% accuracy rate consistantly - you are doing good. Usually he bag goes thru a scanner tunnel, with up to six laser raster scanners attempting to find and read the label. Any errors and the bag goes to a manual station where some low paid & bored baggage handler manually enters the next destinaion info. RFID has got to be better.
As long as they (Score:5, Insightful)
Did you buy your bag at Wal-Mart? (Score:2)
Just something to think about.
BYO RFID! (Score:5, Funny)
DELTITE #1: "Uhh, Dave, the system shows 1,337 bags just came off that DC-9. I'm taking my lunch break now, let me know how that turns out."
DELTITE #2: "!"
Re:BYO RFID! (Score:2)
Hopefully the FBI would think it was funny, rather than thinking they should try out the new "terrorist" laws on the books. You could turn your trip into one long adventure...
buy an RFID printer (Score:2)
Re:BYO RFID! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:BYO RFID! (Score:2)
Like the nightmare is going to go away (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Like the nightmare is going to go away (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Like the nightmare is going to go away (Score:2)
Re:Like the nightmare is going to go away (Score:4, Insightful)
1) That your luggage did indeed pass the doorway and is on the plane.
2) Which quadrant/hold it is stored in.
I say this is a damned good thing, and perfect use for RFID.
Re:Like the nightmare is going to go away (Score:2)
We all know how long it can take for bags to make it to baggage claim... what if the workers could just drop *all* the baggage onto a conveyer belt or belts, not worring about where it go
Re:Like the nightmare is going to go away (Score:3, Insightful)
Scanners on the entrances/exits of all doorways and belts would allow your individual bag to be tracked along is journey - all without having to individually pick up and orient the item so that the barcode scanner can see.
Its the same thinking that supermarkets are wanting, but when we move into items which go home with us, the privacy issues increase.
I have no problem in using the right tool for the job, and can only see practical benefits with using th
Re:Like the nightmare is going to go away (Score:2, Insightful)
At least I'd know it's in the pile, which is a hell of a lot better than being told it's "probably on another flight" and "should be here within a few days." Followed, of course, by the unspoken: "and we might deliver it to the address you just gave us that we might have written down. Maybe."
Doesn't anyone (Score:2, Funny)
Getting ridiculous!! (Score:3, Funny)
...oh wait, you mean they can use it to find my luggage when it gets lost or shipped on the wrong flight?
Track the bags to its owner (Score:5, Interesting)
I dont know whether its such an issue here, but outside US, anyone or anything can walk in to a baggage terminal and walk off with someone else's bag with out being stopped. And Usually this happens when the owner of the baggage hasnt gotten to the baggage terminal from the gate. What if Delta has a counter where travellers once they collect their baggage and on their way out, can scan their RFID's, verify they were the rightful owner of the bag and then remove the RFID to go their own merry way? Someone trying to steal the baggage could get flagged since his RFID will still be in place when he attempts to leave..
This might lead to long lines again in the baggage terminal and can cost the airline more, but does this make sense?
Re:Track the bags to its owner (Score:5, Interesting)
track the crooks to their next haul (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:track the crooks to their next haul (Score:3, Funny)
A few years ago (pre "homeland security"), I was coming back from Lincoln, NE. Plane delayed, plane delayed more, plane cancelled. Rerouted who knows where (sent to airport sort of near home, then to airport very far from home, then back to airport nearest home).
Get home, no luggage. Surprise, surprise!
24 hours later, still no word from airline, so I call them (US domestic carrier). They have a record of having received my bag, but have no idea where it is (and actual
Re:Track the bags to its owner (Score:2)
Re:Track the bags to its owner (Score:2)
How about an RFID sensor on the bathroom door that alerts security? Just a thought.
Re:Track the bags to its owner (Score:2)
No. Baggage has to be tracked during transport. I agree with you RFID can and will be abused a number of ways, but tracking baggage will not be one of them.
And the reason is! |drumroll| Bags are already tracked!! :) Its just by those stupid tags they stick to your luggage. So it doesn't really matter, regular tag or rfid tag eh? :)
Re:Track the bags to its owner (Score:2, Insightful)
Could someone please explain exactly how this system could be abused? There's two things here that almost everyone (save for one poster above) has missed. Most importantly, they ALREADY KNOW/SHOULD KNOW where the luggage is going. If they don't, they aren't doing their job. That's what those spiffy barcodes (as earlier poster mentioned) are for. Secondly, even if you had no lugg
Privacy not that important (Score:4, Funny)
remember, what happens in vegas, stays in vegas.
Good news, sir! (Score:4, Funny)
"But, I'm in New York and I leave for California tomorrow."
"No, problem. We can give you realtime tracking information as your baggage follows you around the country."
ever been on a flight (Score:4, Interesting)
damn annoying.. they have to find the suitcase and offload it.. I'm sure this will make that a whole damn lot faster..
I often wonder what makes a person miss the flight at that point.... it's gotta be sex...
Re:ever been on a flight (Score:3, Informative)
Sure, most of the time it's probably a missed connection, but it's definitely worth it.
However, to my knowledge, there has never been an actual bomb detected this way.
Re:ever been on a flight (Score:2)
How would you ever know if a bomb were detected this way? They grab the luggage and throw it into a pile until the owner comes to pick it up. I don't think they do additional searches/scans of it.
Re:ever been on a flight (Score:2)
The bomb might have a pressure fuse to keep it from blowing up prematurely in the event of a delayed flight; I don't know how sophisticated they are. That would keep the bomb from being detected.
I imagine that once the luggage has sat for months that they open it up to see who it belongs to, or maybe they sell it at a yard sale, but perhaps they just throw it out.
Re:ever been on a flight (Score:2)
In the US, it's sold - there's an outfitthat sells the bag and contents. Apparently it's a big operation.
I might as well be the one to post this... (Score:4, Funny)
one REALLY nice use (Score:5, Interesting)
it has to suck if a passenger ends up getting bumped from a flight last minute and Todd the baggage handler has to find that one passenger's bags. Actually last night my brother's flight was super delayed because some guy in first class threw a hissy fit about something and was ejected from the plane. it was while first class was still boarding so well in advance of the plane being loaded. theys till had to go in and find his luggage and pull it out. that has to be a lot of digging......
Funny story this (Score:2, Interesting)
On a side note about the RFID tags. Purdue's Aviation Technology department has been doing research into this with United Airlines at their
Re:one REALLY nice use (Score:2)
Re:one REALLY nice use (Score:2)
Delta going bankrupt? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Delta going bankrupt? (Score:2, Interesting)
I thought they were broke!! (Score:3, Funny)
Of course, the rest of the time, the airlines all whine about being broke and ask congress for a big bailout.
Re:Jetblue (Score:2)
The real reason that Delta is failing is because theyve got a broken business plan and refuse to adapt. If they dont adapt, they should die. Period.
$25 million is small potatoes (Score:5, Insightful)
It's real use (Score:5, Funny)
Baggage Claim Desk: Your luggage was diverted.
Me: oh no to where?
Baggage Claim Desk: Bulgaria.
After RFID:
Baggage Claim Desk: Your luggage was diverted.
Me: oh no to where?
Baggage Claim Desk: Bulgaria.
Re:It's real use (Score:2)
This is NOT a privacy issue (Score:5, Insightful)
Face it. If you want privacy in your travel, you have two choices: avoid airports, or develop a very good false identity.
Given that I've left my privacy behind at the security checkpoint, anything that makes it easier for the airlines/airports to handle and transport my bags back to me at my final destination can't be seen as anything but a positive development.
Is this safe? (Score:2, Interesting)
Mobile (cell for you Yanks) phones are banned from flights due to (I presume) radio interference. Will hundreds of RFID tags not pose a similar risk?
Also Fewer than a million of the 80 million or so bags Delta handles in an average year fail to reach their final destination
So around 1 in 80 bags ends up on the wrong flight? So, assuming 1 bag/passenger, around 7 bags get lost on a typical 747 flight? That sounds an awful lot to me.
Re:Is this safe? (Score:3, Informative)
RFID tags are passive, meaning they only emit radiation when probed by a scanner. So, no interference with the plane electronics.
Re:Is this safe? (Score:2)
Off topic, but is there an American that exists who doesn't know what the term "mobile phone" means? It's true that many people still misapply the term "cellular" to their mobile phones, but they know what "mobile" means.
I return your derogatory use of the word Yank, you Yank.
Didn't I see this on a test somewhere? (Score:5, Insightful)
A) Puppies
B) Trombones
C) Nuclear power generation
D) Trees
Let's get this straight people - RFID tags are not the devil. They are a technology with the potential to be VERY useful. Do we really have to see EVERY story about EVERY use of RFID tags in the world? Why don't you guys hold off until someone, somewhere actually does something Orwellian with the technology before you spurt the hackneyed, luddite, anti-RFID propaganda?
Oh and just because you disagree doesn't mean I'm trolling. Fuck, that concept is tired too. Where's my coffee?
Re:Didn't I see this on a test somewhere? (Score:3, Funny)
But don't you know? RFID tags are evil. See, somehow the electromagnetic energy used to read them somehow scans your brain and destroys your privacy. Sure, on the surface you might think that they're not too different from barcodes, but that's just what they want you to think. Barcode lasers don't have the privacy-removal side effect!
Sure, Narc's like you will argue that the only real difference between a bar code and an RFID tag is that an RFID tag isn't "immediate line-of-sight", but that's just b
Re:Didn't I see this on a test somewhere? (Score:4, Insightful)
Let's get this straight, not every story about RFID tags is condemning their use.
Do we really have to see EVERY story about EVERY use of RFID tags in the world?
This is a tech website. This is a story about tech. Nowhere in either the summary or the article is there any mention of privacy concerns.
Why don't you guys hold off until someone, somewhere actually does something Orwellian with the technology before you spurt the hackneyed, luddite, anti-RFID propaganda?
Why don't you hold off on complaining about hackneyed, luddite, anti-RFID propaganda until someone actually posts some?
Can we get some real innovations in travel? (Score:3, Interesting)
I just took a flight to boston from Philadelphia. The entire trip from parking at philadelphia to landing at boston took close to 3 hrs. It's probably 6 hours drive to boston. I'm not really saving much time here. Fortunately my company paid for it, but it was amazingly expensive because it was booked last minute for a customer.
What I want to see is the Air Taxi system that NASA and the FAA were working on. This was an overhaul in the Air Traffic control system which would open up new options in air travel. An Air Taxi could simply be a small prop or smaller jet plane that would be cheaper to fly and maintain, and it would be a lot easier to get on and off... like a taxi!
Or how about some MagLev trains? A 300+ Mph train on a safe and easy to maintain elevated track. If we could just find a way to create the infrastructure, we could make transportation more affordable and easier.
As it stands, our current system is old and antiquated and inconvenient... and expensive! We need some disruptive technologies to get a foothold. Changing the nature of travel will solve more problems than trying to put patches on the current system. I consider this RF solution a patch on a much larger problem.
Re:Can we get some real innovations in travel? (Score:2)
Remember - most of the rest of the world has passports, and isn't afraid to use them ;)
This is a good application (Score:4, Informative)
I work in a library, and RFID has been trying to make its way in for years. The tags for this type of use have a range of only a few feet. The applications range from inventory by just passing a reader down the rows of items while they're still on the shelf, to security gates that tell you what item(s) someone just walked off with, instead of just sending off an alarm and starting the guessing games, or checking in a half dozen items at a time by placing a stack on a reader.
RFID is not always the beast...
Heh (Score:2)
As an Atlantan, I can only hope that Delta is finally getting tired of being known as the short form of "Don't Expect Luggage To Arrive"
Needs a hardcopy backup (Score:2)
Ever watch the grocery clerk scan your groceries?
{swipe} Darn, didn't read.
{swipe} Darn, didn't read.
{swipe} Darn
Now imagine the same thing as bags fall off the belt onto the tarmac while Todd is changing batteries, or trying to get a damaged tag
Violation of Delta SLA (Score:2)
One way to prevent bombs (Score:2)
Cmon people! It's all about customer service! (Score:2)
Hi folks!
Look, I know that there have been some concerns about all of this Radio Frequency ID tags and such, but shucks, this is just a way to get your luggage to you faster! Sure, you have to fill out a few more forms and make sure your picture is attached to the luggage as well as a copy of your national ID card number, and golly, we know that takes a little more time. Aw shucks, just look at it this way, airports are big places with lots of people, so if you los
Question: Aren't the Major Airlines in DEBT? (Score:2)
They need to be tightening their belts and spend their money carefully instead of shoving $25 Million into something that might not work out.
-Nick
It is almost the right idea (Score:2)
Re:Is RFID the new spyware? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Is RFID the new spyware? (Score:5, Insightful)
Switching (Score:2)
Yeah but what's stopping mixups with RFID tags? The thing about security is that the more you have, the more you need. Adding new layers of security does make it harder for mixups, but it also makes it harder to maintain, and airports are always on the edge when it comes to funding where I'm from. I'm not against RFIDs, but if they are
Re:Is RFID the new spyware? (Score:5, Insightful)
- Barcodes
- Credit Cards
- Drivers Licenses
- Grocery discount cards
- License Plates
- Cookies
Re:Is RFID the new spyware? (Score:2, Funny)
With all those other physical objects, you need to specify what kind of cookies you're talking about. After all the extremely paranoid comments I've seen today, a comment like that just might put Oreo out of business.
Re:Is RFID the new spyware? (Score:2)
- Cell phones
- Loyalty cards
- People in the street looking at you
If you want privacy, don't go into public. it's that simple :)
Re:Is RFID the new spyware? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:RFID == Invasion of Privacy (Score:2)
Re:RFID == Invasion of Privacy (Score:2, Funny)
Re:RFID == Invasion of Privacy (Score:2)
Yeah, but it's also a stealth search. So what the police can't use the information, shady private investigators can still do it to find stuff out about you.
Whether or not it's legal doesn't always carry a lot of weight in some people's minds.
Re:RFID == Invasion of Privacy (Score:2)
Have you listened to what you're saying? You're jumping to some conclusions here - the main one being that RFID tags, like price tags, are removable from clothes and products. They're exactly the same as barcodes - small, unique identifiers for objects. Why aren't barcodes so evil? They aren't. You're showing you're worried about inter-cooperation of people with the scanners, which is rather more paranoid than simply being wary of RFIDs.
The RFID tracking won't make anyone safer - that's n
Re:RFID == Invasion of Privacy (Score:2)
No, it's not. In the case of baggage handling, a "search" would mean opening your luggage and looking through its contents. Or, in your paranoid world, not opening your luggage and scanning for RFID tags attached to each item inside. Airlines and the TSA are already allowed (indeed, required) to screen bags, and that may mean opening them, scanning them, whatever. So anyway you slice it, it's not illegal.
Delta is surely not planning on scanning for RF
Re:RFID == Invasion of Privacy (Score:2)
RFID scanning is the equilvilent of an illegal search.
How so? How is scanning an RFID on a piece of luggage any different from the barcode scanning they do now? Technically different, the purpose is the same.
They claim it's for inventory and supply chain purposes but they're lying.
Hardly, being in research in RFID, I'm pretty well informed o
Re:RFID == Invasion of Privacy (Score:2)
Others are similar to chaff, they are a pattern of materials or metallic strands that simply reflect a certain pattern (like sonar) back to the reader which can be decoded. These are like barcodes, containing very limited information, but enough to tell the cash register
Re:Is RFID the new spyware? (Score:2)
RFIDs are as inherently dangerous as barcodes. If
Re:Still no substitute for Human Eyes (Score:2)