Hackers clone e-passports
A German computer security consultant has shown that he can clone the electronic passports that the United States and other countries are beginning to distribute this year.
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Although countries have talked about encrypting data that's stored on passport chips, this would require that a complicated infrastructure be built first, so currently the data is not encrypted.
"And of course if you can read the data, you can clone the data and put it in a new tag," Grunwald says.
The cloning news is confirmation for many e-passport critics that RFID chips won't make the documents more secure.
"Either this guy is incredible or this technology is unbelievably stupid," says Gus Hosein, a visiting fellow in information systems at the London School of Economics and Political Science and senior fellow at Privacy International, a U.K.-based group that opposes the use of RFID chips in passports.
"I think it's a combination of the two," Hosein says. "Is this what the best and the brightest of the world could come up with? Or is this what happens when you do policy laundering and you get a bunch of bureaucrats making decisions about technologies they don't understand?"
Posted by Jill Fallon on August 4, 2006 at 3:19 PM | Permalink | TrackBack












