Re: U.S. seeks OSCE pact on biometric passports

2003-09-03 Thread David Honig
At 04:50 PM 9/2/03 -0400, Duncan Frissell wrote:
Anyone have any pointers to non destructive methods of rendering Smart
Chips unreadable?  Just curious.

DCF

Perhaps I'm being dense but how could this be non-destructive? 

Do you mean non-obvious?   Or reversible?

If the usual microwave games don't apply, perhaps sufficient
acceleration or ionic fluids would work.  Thermal stress
for the liquid nitrogen folks?  The flash unit from
a $4 disposable camera does a nice job of vaporizing a spot of 
metal from a coin or screwdriver shorting the cap.

Do any europeans have experience leaving smartcards in the laundry?

One question would be how to discretely test/verify the new read-not mode :-)







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Re: U.S. seeks OSCE pact on biometric passports

2003-09-02 Thread Duncan Frissell
Anyone have any pointers to non destructive methods of rendering Smart
Chips unreadable?  Just curious.

DCF

On Mon, 1 Sep 2003, R. A. Hettinga wrote:

 http://dynamic.washtimes.com/print_story.cfm?StoryID=20030901-124025-4029r

 The Washington Times
 www.washingtontimes.com

 U.S. seeks OSCE pact on biometric passports
 By Nicholas Kralev
 Published September 1, 2003


 VIENNA, Austria - The United States, seeking to keep out terrorists and other 
 criminals, this week begins a major diplomatic effort to persuade 54 nations to 
 adopt biometric standards when issuing passports to their citizens.
 Those standards, regulated by the International Civil Aviation Organization, 
 require every passport to have a machine-readable chip containing the owner's 
 digital photo, which is protected by a digital signature.
 The Bush administration, hoping to minimize the complexity of negotiating 
 separate bilateral agreements with all countries in the world, plans to start with a 
 multilateral accord among the 55 members of the Organization for Security and 
 Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), U.S. diplomats said.
 It's a significant logistical job, Stephen M. Menekes, the U.S. ambassador to 
 the Vienna, Austria-based organization, said in an interview. But it's here, all in 
 place, ready to be used.
 Mr. Menekes said J. Cofer Black, the State Department's coordinator for 
 counterterrorism, had the idea when he attended an OSCE conference in June, and 
 he walked out of here convinced that this was the way to go.
 U.S. diplomats say they hope to sign an agreement at the Dec. 1-2 annual OSCE 
 ministerial meeting in the Dutch city of Maastricht, which would give the event a 
 sufficiently high profile to guarantee the presence of Secretary of State Colin L. 
 Powell. Mr. Powell skipped the meeting last year because of more pressing 
 responsibilities.
 What we are hopeful is to get a decision at the ministerial that all states 
 will commit to at least begin issuing passports with biometric data by December 
 2005, said Katherine Brucker, a political officer at the U.S. mission to the OSCE.
 She noted that 21 of the OSCE members - most of them European Union states - are 
 on the Visa Waiver program, which allows their citizens to enter the United States 
 for short periods without first obtaining a visa at an American consulate overseas.
 They will be obligated to start issuing biometric passports by Oct. 26, 2004, 
 if they want to stay in the program, she said. They already said it's moving in 
 this direction.
 In a paper to its fellow OSCE members outlining its proposal, the United States 
 said that restricting the movement of terrorists and organized criminals is 
 imperative in the global fight against terror.
 The ability of criminals to forge travel documents - or to falsely obtain 
 genuine ones - remains a serious and ongoing problem, says the document, a copy of 
 which was given to The Washington Times.
 Harmonized travel document security measures and features among OSCE 
 participating states would greatly enhance security throughout our region. More 
 effective and harmonized issuance standards and controls, combined with 
 bearer-specific security features, would greatly inhibit the movement of 
 terrorists, it says.
 The Bush administration has been repeatedly accused abroad - particularly in 
 Europe - of pursuing a unilateral foreign policy and bullying other nations into 
 submitting to its wishes.
 But Miss Brucker said the administration is trying to identify ways a large 
 multinational organization can actually do something useful in the war on terror, 
 as in the case of OSCE.
 We've actually been quite successful, she said. The OSCE operates on 
 consensus, and its decisions are only politically - not legally - binding, but 
 countries do take them seriously.
 Soon after the September 11 attacks in 2001, the OSCE pledged to prevent the 
 movement of terrorist individuals or groups through effective border controls and 
 controls on issuance of identity papers and travel documents, as well as through 
 measures for ensuring the security of identity papers and travel documents and 
 preventing their counterfeiting, forgery or fraudulent use.




 Copyright © 2003 News World Communications,  Inc. All rights 
 reserved.
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 [predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
 experience. -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

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