http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,104607,00
.html
 
 


Smart ID card advocates call for government action 

News Story by Grant Gross
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SEPTEMBER 14, 2005 (IDG NEWS SERVICE) <http://www.idg.net/>  - WASHINGTON -
Imagine a so-called smart card that contained your U.S. government-checked
identity, complete with biometric identifiers, plus your three credit-card
accounts, your check card account, possibly even your health records. 


Such a card, containing a small chip that could store kilobytes of data,
could let you zoom through the toll stations on your local highway, act as a
passport when you cross international borders and contain your passwords to
a number of e-commerce Web sites. If this sounds a little far-fetched, it
is, at least at the moment. 

But advocates of government-mandated smart cards envisioned multiple uses
for a small piece of plastic in the name of protecting the U.S. from illegal
aliens and terrorists, during a discussion in Washington yesterday. 

Many privacy advocates have protested proposals to create a national
identification card, saying a card could be used to track U.S. residents and
amass databases full of information. 

Backers of the Real ID Act, passed by Congress in May, are careful to say it
doesn't create a national ID, but it would set up some minimum standards
that states must follow in order for their driver's licenses to remain valid
federal identification. 

In passing the Real ID Act, Congress did not intend to create a series of
hard-to-comply-with rules, but to encourage minimum standards for states to
verify the identities of driver's license holders, said U.S. Rep. Tom Davis,
a Virginia Republican. "We weren't trying to carve out artificially high
standards," said Davis, speaking at a biometrics policy forum sponsored by
the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington
think tank. "This is not an unfunded mandate [to states]." 

Even Davis' call for moderate standards didn't stop other backers of
nationally used smart ID cards from dreaming of a wide number of uses for a
card with machine readable memory capacity. There could be some privacy
risks if smart ID cards are implemented badly, but smart card technology
holds much promise, said Paul Rosenzweig, senior legal research fellow at
the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. 

Regulations attached to the Real ID Act could allow a variety of commercial
uses, including a link to credit cards or check cards, Rosenzweig said. "The
start-up cost borne by the government will be the seed money for commercial
enterprise," he predicted of smart cards. 

The Real ID Act, passed as part of a defense and antiterrorism funding bill,
mandates that states require several forms of verifiable identification
before issuing driver's licenses. States can decide not to comply with the
law, but then their driver's licenses could not be used by residents as an
accepted federal ID, required for activities such as boarding commercial
airplanes. 

The act also allows the Department of Homeland Security to define
"machine-readable" technology used in federal IDs as well as any biometric
data such as fingerprints or retina scans that should be part of the smart
cards. 

With these regulations still to be determined, the act could be the
beginning of a smart card boom, Rosenzweig said. If implemented correctly,
smart cards could also provide a level of anonymity for users, he said. For
example, a smart card connected to a credit card could assure a retailer
that the credit card has money enough to pay for a pair of dress pants
without disclosing much additional personal information to the retailer,
unless law enforcement agents dug into the transaction. 

Rosenzweig called possible data masking by smart cards "pseudonymity." Smart
card users could walk around with "practical obscurity" if the cards are
implemented correctly, he said. 

Joining Rosenzweig in calling for powerful smart cards was Rob Atkinson,
vice president of the Progressive Policy Institute (PPI), a think tank
aligned with moderate Democrats. Atkinson called for government smart cards
to have open standards that would allow businesses to "automate all kinds of
processes." 

Atkinson went further than Davis by calling for tough standards under the
Real ID Act. Multiple states with driver's licenses that aren't accepted as
national IDs would create major confusion and allow terrorists with
state-issued IDs to open bank accounts or rent cars, he said. Smart cards
with biometic data would make fake IDs or driver's licenses purchased using
fraudulent documents harder to get, he said. 

Under the old system, where there are no national standards for issuing
state driver's licenses, fake IDs are easy to get over the Web, Atkinson
said. He recently interviewed several college students for internships at
PPI, and they either had fake IDs or knew where to get one, he said. 

"If a college student can get it, a dedicated terrorist certainly can get
it," he added. 

Although most of the speakers supported smart ID cards, they could create
privacy and security concerns if implemented improperly, said Nancy Libin,
staff counsel at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a privacy advocacy
group. Most people, if given a choice of one key that would open their
house, open their car, start their car and open several other locks, would
likely choose to carry multiple keys because of the fear of losing the one
multi-use key, Libin said. 

Likewise, a smart card that includes a national ID, multiple credit card
accounts and other data could cause many problems if it was lost, she said. 

Libin also noted that biometric scans that some people want linked to smart
cards are not fool-proof. Fingerprints could possibly be digitally copied
and duplicated, she said. 

"Unlike passwords, biometrics aren't secret, and they cannot be easily
modified," she added. "Once that biometric has been ... compromised, it's
done. It cannot be reissued, it's finished." 





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