Passports to get RFID chip implants

By Declan McCullagh
http://news.com.com/Passports+to+get+RFID+chip+implants/2100-7348_3-5913644.
html

Story last modified Tue Oct 25 12:12:00 PDT 2005


All U.S. passports will be implanted with remotely-readable computer chips
starting in October 2006, the Bush administration has announced.

Sweeping new State Department regulations issued Tuesday say that passports
issued after that time will have tiny radio frequency ID (RFID) chips that
can transmit personal information including the name, nationality, sex, date
of birth, place of birth and digitized photograph of the passport holder.
Eventually, the government contemplates adding additional digitized data
such as "fingerprints or iris scans."

Over the last year, opposition to the idea of implanting RFID chips in
passports has grown amidst worries that identity thieves could snatch
personal information out of the air simply by aiming a high-powered antenna
at a person or a vehicle carrying a passport. Out of the 2,335 comments on
the plan that were received by the State Department this year, 98.5 percent
were negative. The objections mostly focused on security and privacy
concerns.

But the Bush administration chose to go ahead with embedding 64KB chips in
future passports, citing a desire to abide by "globally interoperable"
standards devised by the International Civil Aviation Organization, a United
Nations agency. Other nations, including the United Kingdom and Germany,
have announced similar plans.

In regulations published Tuesday, the State Department claims it has
addressed privacy concerns. The chipped passports "will not permit
'tracking' of individuals," the department said. "It will only permit
governmental authorities to know that an individual has arrived at a port of
entry--which governmental authorities already know from presentation of
non-electronic passports--with greater assurance that the person who
presents the passport is the legitimate holder of the passport."

To address Americans' concerns about ID theft, the Bush administration said
the new passports will be outfitted with "antiskimming material" in the
front cover to "mitigate" the threat of the information being
surreptitiously scanned from afar. It's not clear, though, how well the
technique will work against high-powered readers that have been demonstrated
to read RFID chips from about 160 feet away. (The State Department was not
immediately available for comment.)

In addition, the passports will use "Basic Access Control," a reference to
storing a pair of secret cryptographic keys in the chip inside. The concept
is simple: The RFID chip disgorges its contents only after a reader
successfully authenticates itself as being authorized to receive that
information.

Computer scientists, however, have criticized that encryption method as
flawed. In a recent paper (PDF here), RSA Laboratories' Ari Juels, and
University of California's David Molnar and David Wagner, warned that the
design of the encryption keys is insufficiently secure. They said that the
use of a "single fixed key" for the lifetime of the e-passport creates a
vulnerability.

The Bush administration could face an eventual legal challenge. A letter to
the State Department from privacy groups (PDF here) says there is "no
statutory authority" for the RFID passport because Congress has not
authorized it.


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