Unbalanced states violates RFID privacy

Designing privacy preserving authentication protocols for massively deployed Radio Frequency IDentification (RFID) systems is a real world challenge that have drawn significant attention from RFID community. This interest yields considerable amount of proposals targeting to overcome the main bottlen...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of intelligent manufacturing Vol. 25; no. 2; pp. 273 - 281
Main Authors Erguler, Imran, Anarim, Emin, Saldamli, Gokay
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Boston Springer US 01.04.2014
Springer Nature B.V
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ISSN0956-5515
1572-8145
DOI10.1007/s10845-012-0655-4

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Summary:Designing privacy preserving authentication protocols for massively deployed Radio Frequency IDentification (RFID) systems is a real world challenge that have drawn significant attention from RFID community. This interest yields considerable amount of proposals targeting to overcome the main bottleneck (i.e. the exhaustive search over the list of all tag entries) which appears in the back-end database for large-scale RFID tag deployments. A class of these proposals contains RFID protocols where the server authenticates the tag in a negligible constant/sub-linear time for a more frequent normal state and needs a linear search in a rare abnormal states. In this study, however, we show that such protocols having unbalanced states are subject to side-channel attacks and do not preserve the RFID privacy. To illustrate this brutal security flaw, we conduct our analysis on different RFID protocols.
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ISSN:0956-5515
1572-8145
DOI:10.1007/s10845-012-0655-4