surveillance cameras, traffic cameras, and satellites.
What civilian organization owns or has access to real-time tracking satellites? Google Ring cameras might be networked and data collected by AI, but they are not that common yet for any kind of real-time coverage. Traffic cams and license plate scanners might be helpful to catch you if you are wanted, but not track everyone in real time all the time.
I would probably use not just one input, but multiple inputs to gather data, and then use machine learning to predict the path of the target to track them. You can use Markov Chains algorithm to predict the path they are most likely to take depending on the data given by the data sources. Google Map can be used to find all the possible roads to apply this algorithm.
Toll transponders. I've read tire companies are even embedding sensors in tires.
You need equipment to read those RFID tags. Not all RFID tags can work at a significant distance so the transponders/readers would need to be high powered and positioned relatively close to the tag to read it. The fears associated with RFID and NFC tag technology have not been warranted because those who spread the fear often know nothing about the technology and its limitations. There are much better ways of tracking people/vehicles than using RFID/NFC. You cell phone is ideal for this since the infrastructure is already in place for this and the phone has the necessary sensors and transmitting power to make it work. Put your fear where it is warranted instead of technologies that don't work the way you think they do.
True. I can imagine sensors in roads that can not only read vehicles traveling over them, but can also scan tire sensors and possibly other NFC tags. 13.56 MHz tags have ranges of up to 5 feet. 433 Mhz tags can read over a mile away with proper antennas. 860 - 960 MHz tags typically have a range of 7 feet and can be designed for substantially higher ranges. 2.45GHz tags operate in the same band as WiFi and can exceed 160 feet.
Passive tags are designed to be cheap to make and require no direct power. That's not the same as only having NFC limits. Mostly those limits are there because typical use cases involve small devices with close proximities. Given a desire to read RFID tags at long distances only requires sufficient power and antennas to accommodate the requirements.
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