
History of retail security gates (part 4)
The recent chapter
The last decade reshaped what an in-store gate is expected to do. Three forces drove the change: the explosion of personal mobile devices, the maturity of UHF RFID, and the arrival of usable AI for noise discrimination.
Mobile-device interference
Smartphones, smartwatches and Bluetooth earbuds add radio energy at the entrance. Older RF gates frequently misread this as a tag signature. Modern controllers carry a digital filter that recognises and discards mobile-device emission patterns.
RFID at item level
UHF RFID at 860–960 MHz finally became cheap enough for general retail around 2018. A modern RFID gate not only alarms — it logs which exact SKU left the store, in which order. That data feeds inventory directly.
AI-based noise rejection
Top-tier 2024 gates now run lightweight neural classifiers on antenna input streams. They learn the local noise floor over a few weeks and reduce false alarm rates by 60–80% compared with rule-based filtering.
Vista EAS now imports both noise-AI RF and UHF RFID gates into Iran.




