NEWS Although vendors and civil libertarians alike have been shouting from the roof tops about RFID, it appears someone forgot to tell a large proportion of the UK's top management.
Just under half of board level execs – 43 per cent - said they didn't know what RFID was, while an almost equal number – 45 per cent - are up to speed on the tracking technology, according to new statistics from Unisys, leaving industry fairly evenly split on whether the tags are a supply chain saviour or the latest victim of tech hype.
However, it seems the technology is gaining ground nonetheless. 33 per cent of those surveyed were "actively evaluating the technology", while another 12 per cent were moving even faster and planned to have the chips in place within two years.
Whether C-level personnel are aware of RFID depends on the vertical industry they work in, the figures show, with half of management in the pharmaceutical industry not familiar with the technology in question while 26 per cent were evaluating RFID and six per cent already had the chips in place in the supply chain.
In the US, where drug counterfeiting is more common, the pharmaceutical industry is leading from the front in driving uptake of RFID.
The US Food and Drug administration is actively encouraging the use of the track and trace chips to secure the supply chain. It said in a recent report: "Significant feasibility studies and technology improvements are underway to confirm that RFID will provide cost-reducing benefits in areas such as inventory control, while also providing the ability to track and trace the movement of every package of drugs from production to dispensing. Most importantly, reliable RFID technology will make the copying of medications either extremely difficult or unprofitable."
One such feasibility study in the US saw several major drug manufacturers, including Abbott Laboratories, Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer and Proctor & Gamble, trialling the technology along with pharmacies on 13,500 packages of drugs over eight weeks.
A Pfizer spokesman told silicon.com that the technology still has its limitations. "We don't look at RFID as silver bullet [against counterfeiting]… we see it as an important technology and wanted to be involved," he said.





Comments
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1. John H Woods
My father-in-law-to-be was asking me what I thought of the privacy implications of RFID the other day --- he's a builder. My mum has an opinion --- she's a retired schoolteacher. My blonde, 'Hello'-reading, horse-mad fiancee asked me how they work last week. And 43% of *board* level execs don't know what they are! This just shows these morons got their jobs through nepotism and networking.
Sack the lot of them, and use the opportunity to improve the gender balance and the average IQ of the board: women tend to know what's going on beyond the golf course.
2. Thomas OZENNE
Avoiding Fakes, as far as we get with Barcodes and bills anti-copy when will we make RFID money paper? makes me thing I still have some £ to trade you from € :-) someday maybe , ok stupid non British comment unordered and unsorted , but that's true that Health is first and drugs fakers may just kill ... Now what the Cost of RFID :-/
3. Glen Monks
I freely admit it, I don't know what RFID is. I get a newsletter from Silicon saying that customers know about it and are scared, and that lots of executives don't know what is is. If ignorance is so widespread, how about introducing either of these articles with a single sentance saying "RFID is...."?