Thursday, February 5, 2009

Hackers clone passports in drive-by RFID heist

Iain Thomson 
ITNews
February 5, 2009

A British hacker has shown how easy it is to clone US passport cards that use RFID by conducting a drive-by test on the streets of San Francisco.

Chris Paget, director of research and development at Seattle-based IOActive, used a US$250 Motorola RFID reader and an antenna mounted in a car’s side window and drove for 20 minutes around San Francisco, with a colleague videoing the demonstration.

During the demonstration he picked up the details of two US passport cards, which are fitted with RFID chips and can be used instead of traditional passports for travel to Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean.

“I personally believe that RFID is very unsuitable for tagging people,” he said.

“I don’t believe we should have any kind of identity document with RFID tags in them. My ultimate goal here would be, my dream for this research, would be to see the entire Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative be scrapped.”

Research related articles:

  1. China puts RFID tags in a billion ID cards
  2. New York Offers “Enhanced” RFID Driver’s Licenses
  3. New RFID Technology Allows You to be Tracked WITHOUT Your Knowledge
  4. Big Brother’s Plan to Put RFID on Americans
  5. Enhanced Tracking Technology May Propel Adoption of RFID
  6. VeriChip Corp. Takes Downturn in Wake of RFID Caner-Link
  7. Passports will be needed to buy mobile phones in UK
  8. U.S. School District to Begin Microchipping Students
  9. British travellers could be banned from flying to America
  10. Microsoft wants to get under your skin
  11. Rupert Murdoch Firm Hired Hackers To Sabotage Rival, Lawsuit Alleges
  12. Cyber Security Expert: Hackers Planning To Steal Election For McCain