U.S. passports to be implanted with RFID chips

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onerifle

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Amazing...not even a peep from the media at large...:rolleyes: :mad:



Passports to get RFID chip implants


By Declan McCullagh
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-1009_22-5913644.html?tag=nl.e550

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 shielding in the passport is a physical device that basically, when the passport cover is closed, it's very difficult to read the chip," a State Department official, who did not wish to be identified by name, said Tuesday. The official was unable to provide details about the material's composition. The National Institute of Standards and Technology, which has been working to evaluate the chip's vulnerability to skimming, was unable to provide further information on Tuesday.

Privacy advocates told CNET News.com that the anti-skimming device was a decent start. But if the cover of the passport happens to be open, all bets are off, said Bill Scannell, a privacy advocate who founded the site RFIDkills.com. "They've built little baby radio stations into peoples' passports and covered it with concrete," he said, "but when the little hatch is open, you can still hear the music."

"It's better than nothing," Scannell went on, "but why take this risk?"

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.

"Our point is, whatever Congress may have meant in giving the State Department authority to issue passports was probably to issue passports that were like the old passports," said Lee Tien, staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which co-authored the comments. "But at some point you are doing something that is significantly different, which should probably require some sort of additional congressional authorization. The argument is how broadly does that authority go, and honestly, it's something no one knows."
 
RFIDs containing personal or financial information are just absolutely and completely stupid.

All it takes is someone with a hacked-up, overpowered reader a distance away to bounce a signal off it, which "interrogates" it, and you have digital pickpockets.

The "cover" is a joke, too. Do you really think anything the gov't has made by a lowest-bidder contractor is going to be perfect? :D
 
I agree with manedwolf.


There are pigs flying outside my window. Some dude named "Satan" is sharpening a pair of ice skates.
 
...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.

Don't look at me: I voted for Badnarik, the Libertarian candidate last time around.
 
Standing Wolf

Don't look at me: I voted for Badnarik, the Libertarian candidate last time around.


Same here. Sometimes you have to say to :cuss: with the lesser of two evils and vote for a canadate that you can actualy agree with most of the stuff they say.
 
So - Bush chooses to implement a scheme invented by ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization), a body run by the United Nations with a mandate to set passport standards. Our statist President does good again.
 
Sometime ago there was a thread about disabling these chips in a microwave oven......................
Josh
 
Standing Wolf said:
Don't look at me: I voted for Badnarik, the Libertarian candidate last time around.

+1

I won't contribute to the coming police state.
 
I believe these regulations may also be required by countries you visit.
 
From a practical point of view, they must also implement a plan for WHEN these units fail. (not if).

When implementing a high-tech solution such as this on such a mass scale, it is not possible to preclude failure 100%. There will be electronic failure of a small percentage of those devices.

Such a plan would probably be to just revert back to the old paper/manual method.;)
 
Bad thing is, whenever a package is sent out by UPS, IT has one of
those RFID's attached to it, according to the ad I see on TV
from UPS..Now if they could just keep the package from being
destroyed or stolen during transport, that would be a REAL prize.

Sorry for going off topic.
 
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.
<heavy-handed sarcasm>But it's okay. I'm sure Kerry would have ignored people even more and done this even worse, somehow...</heavy-handed sarcasm>

pax
 
No peep about these chips, the ignoring of due process, massive privacy invasions with domestic intelligence, gunfights at our own border, etc, etc.


...but NPR today ran an extensive expose and repeatedly voiced concerns, calling an event "Brave New World"-ish. The event? The first face-transplant.

Does anyone here really have any concerns over burn victims and animal attack victims receiving facial skin grafting? :banghead:
 
I am SO glad that Congress requires government agencies to request and consider public comments before going ahead and doing whatever-the-heck they want to anyway.
 
Zundfolge said:
*beep* *beep* *beep*

20 seconds of hum


*beep-beep-beep-beep-beep*


problem solved.


:evil:

(Message flashes on computer screen at your local DHS office)

PASSPORT SABOTAGED
SUSPECTED TERRORIST AT (your address)
COUNTER TERRORISM TEAM DISPATCHED

*"Department of Homeland Security" agents kick down your front door at 3am and drag you away to a secret prison, never to be heard from again*
 
yet at the same time police agencies around the country use cad systems (computer aided dispatch) that swap your personal information between the patrol, precinct and central database a few hundred times a year, all wireless on very crude radio waves with mediocre encryption.

so far, i haven't heard of anyone hacking that system..
 
I predict a boom market for whoever brings out the first metal-mesh-lined carry pocket for the new passports. Try to read the chip through that! :D
 
Preacherman said:
I predict a boom market for whoever brings out the first metal-mesh-lined carry pocket for the new passports. Try to read the chip through that! :D

No need, they will just ask you to hand it over on every corner :banghead: Legally. :banghead:
 
I was in the editing stages of a nice big, long post about this, when I realized that this is probably going to happen any way. The disgust I feel about not even being allowed my input on the .gov doing this, (It seems to be a "done deal") is better articulated by other members of THR. My one fingered typing, and ever increasing blood pressure, make it more reasonable to just read, rather than post MY particular rant on this.

Another way to look at this, is that we could pool a little bit of cash, and hire an electronics firm to produce for us "The Volkanator 2006 Reader! The most powerfull Reader known to man! So powerfull, it can read a RIFD chip through a 1/16 In. lead liner!!!" That would make their little RFID chip "Obsolete" from the get-go.

But then again, that would just be "enabling" criminals.
 
Handheld Tesla coils. Small, portable, concealable and effective. Another example of how our ruling class is determined to make something happen while the taxpaying class is not consulted or even support the actions.

I can easily see the development of passive civil disobedience springing up in a variety of locations. "I'm sorry Mr. Fed.gov, it worked just yesterday and now it is dead. Shame." :evil:
 
When my "papers" expire, I think my new ones will accidentally end up under a cherry danish in the microwave. Oh, silly me!
 
Don't have a passport. Whenever I traveled out of this country I never needed anything more than my ID card and travel orders. Since I no longer work for that employer I have no need to leave again!!:D

Oneshooter
Livin in Texas
 
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