Posted by Lori Ayre on May 11, 2011

It's official....NISO recommends ISO 28560-2.   From NISO Newsline: NISO announced the availability of RFID in U.S. Libraries (NISO RP-6-201x) for a thirty day public comment period, beginning immediately and ending on June 9, 2011. This revision of the 2008 Recommended Practice recommends a set of practices and procedures to ensure interoperability among U.S. RFID implementations in libraries. By following these recommendations, libraries can ensure that an RFID tag in one library can be used seamlessly by another, even if they have different suppliers for tags, hardware, and software.

 

/August 29, 2011  insert /  I've attached a copy of the proposed standard to this blog post.  It will likely change somewhat after they incorporate some of the comments they received but this gives you a good idea of the basics.  /end 

 

Since the publication of the original Recommended Practice, there have been new developments with regard to RFID implementation in the larger book industry as well as in other countries. Most importantly, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has published a three-part international standard on RFID in Libraries (ISO 28560) governing the data model and the encoding of data on RFID tags for item management in libraries. The revised NISO Recommended Practice has been updated to reflect changes in technology and security and privacy measures, and to conform to the new ISO standard.

 

RFID in U.S. Libraries defines a model for the data elements to be placed on library RFID tags, as well as the formatting and encoding of that data,” explains Paul Sevcik, Lead Product Development Specialist at 3M Library Systems and co-chair of the NISO RFID Revision Working Group. “The international standard offers two different encoding options and many optional data elements, so it is critical that U.S. implementers adopt a common approach for implementing the standard.”

 

“This Recommended Practice has been developed to be the U.S. profile for implementation of the ISO 28560 international standard” states Vinod Chachra, CEO of VTLS, Inc. and co-chair of the NISO RFID Revision Working Group. “Its use will ensure that U.S. libraries can procure tags and equipment from different vendors, merge collections containing different manufacturers’ tags, and, for the purposes of interlibrary loan, read the tags on items belonging to other libraries.”

 

“This revision included input from RFID hardware manufacturers, solution providers (software and integration), content distributors and libraries,” said Todd Carpenter, NISO Managing Director. “In addition to the data model, the Recommended Practice provides guidelines on security, privacy, vandalism, and migrating existing library RFID implementations to the new model. Standardizing on this Recommended Practice will allow the RFID tag to be used in the entire lifecycle of physical library materials, including the upstream processes of acquisition and distribution.”

 

The draft Recommended Practice and an online comment form is available at: www.niso.org/workrooms/rfid/. Libraries, publishers, distributors, system providers, and tag manufacturers are all encouraged to review and comment on the document.

 

Attachment: RP-6-201x_RFID-in_US_Libraries_rev_for_comment.pdf