Japanese bank taps RFID for document security
By Paul Kallender
,
IDG News Service
, 08/18/2004
- Share/Email
- Tweet This
- Print
NEC Tuesday said it has signed a contract with a Japanese bank for a radio frequency identification-based document management
system.
The system, which NEC claims is the world's first system to use RFID for this function, will be introduced by the Bank of Nagoya in April 2005, NEC said. Bank of Nagoya is a regional bank in
central Japan. Financial details of the agreement were not disclosed.
The system, which is still under development, will use omni-directional antennas attached to bookshelves and filing cabinets
that communicate data from RFID tags embedded in documents to a software system that offers real-time document tracking, according
to Motofumi Yamamuro, an NEC spokesperson. NEC is co-developing the system with Nikko Telecommunications, a computer systems
sales company.
Yamamuro said the system, which NEC is targeting at banks, financial institutions, libraries, hospitals and other institutions
that store sensitive documents, is designed to be combined with other security systems to provide comprehensive and detailed
document protection. When combined with employee identification systems using cards or fingerprint sensors or tags, the RFID
system could help enable real-time recording of which employees are removing or replacing which documents, whether authorized
or not, from a filing cabinet or room.
"We see this system working on top of, or in combination with, a number of other systems to provide high-security document
protection...Say, for example, a person manages to take a document that he or she is not authorized to access, the system
could sound an alert to warn a security systems person of this," Yamamuro said.
In a March 2004 survey of 450 wireless developers, Evans Data a U.S. market research company reported that RFID security and
access control applications are the most likely RFID technologies that companies will deploy over the next two years. The
company predicted that the global market for RFID-based security and access control applications could grow 450% over the
next 12 months and a further 95% in 2006.
NEC also claims the system will aid workflow management and inventory. For example, in a case study conducted for the Bank
of Nagoya that assumed the system used 100,000 tags, NEC calculated the bank would save about ¥6 million ($54,000) per year
for inventory checks compared to having staff manually conduct the process using bar codes and readers. Yamamuro said NEC
would not disclose the total cost of conducting the inventory process using staff and bar code readers in the case study on
confidentiality grounds.
"But we can say that the major cost reduction came from reduction in personnel time and costs," Yamamuro said.
NEC won't reveal technical specifications or costs of the antennae and software yet because the system is still "under development,"
Yamamuro said. However the software management system, that can be installed on servers and workstations, will cost "about
¥3 million," he said.
A key feature of the system is its ability to read data from a number of already commercially available RFID tags and chips,
including the myu chip from Hitachi, and RFID tags developed by Omron, Fujitsu and Toppan Printing, Yamamuro said.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
Comment