The Guardian newspaper reports that it took a tame security advisor just 48 hours to write software that can pull off information remotely from the latest 'ultra-secure" UK passports.
All that was required was the passport spec published on the web site of the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) - to know how to access the chip - and a £250 chip reader.
Explaining the background, the paper reports that in 2003, The International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), recommended that passports should contain facial biometrics stored on a radio-frequency identification (RFID) chip that can be accessed from a short distance using radio waves. Similar chips, it says, are commonly found in retail, where they are used for stock control.
The specs that the ICAO provides tell you how to calculate the chip's access key using the passport number, the holder's date of birth and the passport expiry date.
Adam Laurie - technical director of Bunker Secure Hosting, a Kent-based company specialising in business-continuity data hosting- and the man who devised the cracking technique, is quoted as saying,
Laurie also says,
The newspaper also points out that the problems it has identified with RFID chips in passports raise a lot of worrying questions about the use of such chips in the UK's proposed ID card scheme.
It also highlights a recent report from a EU-funded body - FIDIS (Future of Identity in the Information Society) that says,
Oh dear, oh dear.
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