<<http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,65243,00.html>>

RFID Driver's Licenses Debated  


By Mark Baard

09:50 AM Oct. 06, 2004 PT


Some federal and state government officials want to make state driver's
licenses harder to counterfeit or steal, by adding computer chips that
emit a radio signal bearing a license holder's unique, personal
information.

. 
In Virginia, where several of the 9/11 hijackers obtained driver's
licenses, state legislators Wednesday will hear testimony about how radio
frequency identification, or RFID, tags may prevent identity fraud and
help thwart terrorists using falsified documents to move about the
country.

Privacy advocates will argue that the radio tags will also make it easy
for the government to spy on its citizens and exacerbate identity theft,
one of the problems the technology is meant to relieve.

Virginia is among the first states to explore the idea of creating a
smart driver's license, which may eventually use any combination of RFID
tags and biometric data, such as fingerprints or retinal scans.

"Nine of the 19 9/11 terrorists obtained their licenses illegally in
Virginia, and that was quite an embarrassment," said Virginia General
Assembly delegate Kathy Byron, chairwoman of a subcommittee looking into
the use of so-called smart driver's licenses, which may include RFID
technology.

The biometric data would make it harder for an individual to use a stolen
or forged driver's license for identification. The RFID tags would make
the licenses a "contact-less" technology, verifying IDs more efficiently,
and making lines at security checkpoints move quicker.

Because information on RFID tags can be picked up from many feet away,
licenses would not have to be put directly into a reader device. If there
was any suspicion that a person was not who he claimed to be, ID checkers
could take him aside for fingerprinting or a retinal scan.

States need to adopt technologies that can ensure a driver's license
holder is who he says he is, said Byron.

Federal legislators may also require states to comply with uniform "smart
card" standards, making state driver's licenses into national
identification cards that could be read at any location throughout the
country. The RFID chips on driver's licenses would at a minimum transmit
all of the information on the front of a driver's license. They may also
eventually transmit fingerprint and other uniquely identifiable
information to reader devices.

But federal mandates for adding RFID chips to driver's licenses would
create an impossible burden for states, which will have to shoulder the
costs of generating new licenses, and installing reader devices in their
motor vehicle offices, said a states' rights advocate.

"It could easily become yet another unfunded federal mandate, of which we
already have $60 billion worth," said Cheye Calvo, director of the
transportation committee at the National Conference of State
Legislatures.

Drivers with E-ZPass tags on their windshields can already cruise through
many highway toll booths without stopping, thanks to RFID technology.

RFID tags, which respond to signals sent out by special reader devices,
have in some tests demonstrated broadcast ranges up to 30 feet. Reader
devices have proven to possess similar "sensing" ranges. This is what has
some privacy advocaters worried, including one testifying tomorrow before
the Virginia legislators.

"The biggest problem is that these tags are remotely readable," said
Christopher Calabrese, council for the American Civil Liberties Union's
Technology and Liberty Program. 

RFID tags inside driver's licenses will make it easy for government
agents with readers to sweep large areas and identify protestors
participating in a march, for example. Privacy advocates also fear that
crooks sitting on street corners could remotely gather personal
information from individual's wallets, such as their birth dates and home
addresses -- the same information many bank employees use to verify
account holders' identities.

Information from card readers could also be coupled with global
positioning system data and relayed to satellites, helping the government
form a comprehensive picture of the comings and goings of its citizens.

Driver's licenses with RFID tags may also become a tool that stalkers use
to follow their victims, said Calabrese. "We're talking about a potential
security nightmare."

But opponents of the use of RFID and other technologies in driver's
licenses and state issued ID cards are conflating RFID's technological
potential with its potential for abuse by government authorities, said
Robert D. Atkinson, vice president at the Progressive Policy Institute.

"Putting a chip or biometric data on a driver's license doesn't change
one iota the rules under which that information can be used," said
Atkinson.

The Virginia legislators may balk at the use of RFID in driver's
licenses, however, unless they can be proven to be immune from use by
spies and identity thieves.

"I can't see us using RFID until we're comfortable we can without
encroaching on individual privacy, and ensure it won't be used as a Big
Brother technology by the government," said Joe May, chairman of the
Virginia General Assembly's House Science and Technology Committee. 

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to