ADASA Inc. RFID Innovation
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Pub US 2010/0283584 A1 

With CIP priority dates back to 2005, this published patent application covers quasi-autonomous RFID tagging systems that are intermittently connected to an authorization network. EPC tag uniqueness is assured without dependence upon slow or unreliable network connections. This is essential for source encoding tags in off-shore manufacturing sites.

Pub US 2010/0283584

Published 11 Nov 2010

Pub US 2010/0289627 A1

With CIP priority dates back to 2005, this published patent application covers a supply chain visibility and product authentication system to protect brand owners from rampant counterfeiting of EPC RFID tags and the goods that they are to validate. This patent discloses how today's EPC silicon is used to prevent well-known EPC tag cloning practices.

Pub US 2010/0289627

Published 18 Nov 2010

Pub. US 2011/0241834 A1

This patent application covers intrinsic consumer notification markings on clear low cost inlays that by so doing eliminates the need for a secondary printing process to provide the required consumer warning text or EPCglobal seal.

Pub US 2009/0002134Published 6 Oct 2011

Pub. WO 2012/011979 A1

Fully Secure Item-Level Tagging provides anti-counterfeiting capabilities through the use of RFID, stenography, nanolithography, fingerprints, novel heuristic threat evaluation, indication, and detection model. Additionally, using cryptography, tag passwords are formulated and identities reversibly flipped, allowing item ID's to remain secret to unauthorized observers.

Pub US 2009/0002134Published 26 Jan 2012