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Open-source RFID personal tracking system gets first test
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January 02, 2007
(IDG News Service) -- An
open-source wireless tracking system for following people around buildings got its first public use last week at the Chaos
Communication Congress in Berlin.
The creators of the OpenBeacon system sold 900 tags at $13 each
to attendees who volunteered to be tracked during the four-day event. Some attendees bought multiple tags to experiment with
later.
OpenBeacon uses chips from Nordic Semiconductor ASA that transmit and receive over the 2.4-GHz frequency,
which is available for unlicensed use in many countries. At the conference, the chips communicated with nearby base stations,
which sent data back to a central server. There were 23 base stations positioned around the conference center.
The
developers of OpenBeacon worked with partners to create a 3-D model of the conference center, and anyone could use touch-screen
monitors that displayed the locations of attendees on the model. Touching an attendee on the screen displayed a profile that
the person could voluntarily add.
The OpenBeacon team used the event as a showcase for the tracking technology
and its implications. "At first look, you don't see anything special about the data moving around the building,"
said Milosch Meriac, one of the creators of OpenBeacon. However, an analysis of data collected over several days and about
many people could lead to assumptions about relationships between people who may have gathered in similar spaces repeatedly,
he noted.
"We wanted to make this analysis transparent so that people are more aware of what data they're
willing to give away," he said. On the last day of the conference, OpenBeacon released all the data gathered over the
four days so anyone could access and analyze it.
The congress is an annual conference that attracts technology
enthusiasts who examine the implications of technology on society.
There are already many types of commercial systems
that could be used for tracking people or things, but Meriac said he wanted to solve several shortcomings in those systems.
He and a friend initially developed OpenBeacon after looking for a way to solve crowd-control problems that often occur when
millions of Muslim pilgrims visit Mecca each year.
They decided that radio-frequency identification technology
wouldn't be helpful because the tags can only be read by passing through gates. Requiring millions of people to funnel
through specific areas might only exacerbate the problem.
There are other tracking systems based on Wi-Fi, but
they often have battery-life limitations and higher costs, Meriac said.
OpenBeacon tracking devices transmit and
then sleep, cutting back on power consumption. The devices could run for several months before requiring a new battery.
The OpenBeacon devices could be distributed to 10,000 pilgrims traveling to Mecca, for example. Their identities wouldn't
be important, but crowd-control monitors could note when many of the tagged pilgrims converge in one spot, implying that many
other untagged people are also in the same area, and then they could work to divert or otherwise alleviate the congestion,
Meriac said.
The firmware, drivers and hardware design for the tracking devices are released under GNU/GPL open-source
licenses. The base station designs are currently unavailable for open source because they were designed closely with a vendor.
Meriac said he hopes that other contributors will develop mesh protocols for the system so that the devices can communicate
with one another rather than only with a central base station.
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