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By Declan McCullagh
Posted on ZDNet News: Oct 25, 2005 7:12:00 PM

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."

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."

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  • Most Recent of 242 Talkback(s)
RE: Passports to get RFID chip implants
If you want to **** your pants, watch this video: zeitgeistmovie.com (Read the rest)
Posted by: Got Brains Posted on: 08/21/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Get Pissed Now or Lose Your Freedom Forever  panzrwagn | 10/25/05
Definately agree...  lawryll@... | 10/25/05
Does getting pissed really work?  toomuchgreeatea@... | 10/25/05
Well  Yuan_Harrison | 10/25/05
Actually you're right  maldain | 10/26/05
Nothing a hammer can't fix!  datadink | 10/26/05
Is there a better way?  wresnick | 10/26/05
Don?t forget SEX photos at Airport terminal gate!  GrosserGnu | 10/27/05
Passports with RFID  jkeels | 10/27/05
When in the course of human events...  voice_of_all_reason | 10/25/05
So you are saying that Big Brother once again is thinking for us?  Laff | 10/25/05
RFID not appropriate at all  shawkins | 10/25/05
Place passport in Microwave and cook for 5 minutes or  Laff | 10/25/05
And go directly to jail  voice_of_all_reason | 10/25/05
I had this small stack of papers that got wet and I  Laff | 10/25/05
Mens rea is irrelevant  voice_of_all_reason | 10/25/05
Well I don't figure on living too much longer anyway  Laff | 10/25/05
Wrong!  voska | 10/25/05
Passport is government property  terry flores | 10/25/05
I am a man without a country.  Laff | 10/26/05
Ok, destroying money is illegal too  voska | 10/26/05
Another point  voska | 10/26/05
And, how would they know?  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Jabb, you'll fit in really well in China  toomuchgreeatea@... | 10/26/05
Just what is in that tea?  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
and pay double for all your plane tickets  toomuchgreeatea@... | 10/25/05
5 minutes is overkill  osreinstall | 10/25/05
Gotta love that one wink  bchesmer | 10/26/05
Meeee 2!!! THAT is PRICELESS!!!:D  btljooz | 10/27/05
I see . . .  CobraA1 | 10/25/05
You'll have to read the fine print  toomuchgreeatea@... | 10/25/05
Ooooh pick me......  bchesmer | 10/26/05
Whack it with a hammer, but the ultimate solution is near.  terry flores | 10/25/05
Ultimate solution  Bill4 | 10/25/05
Besides which  Bill4 | 10/25/05
Glad My Passport Just Got Renewed  itanalyst | 10/25/05
Ha!  Michael Kelly | 10/25/05
..terrorist threat scenario..  nynetsec | 10/25/05
Lord be with us  Yuan_Harrison | 10/25/05
"Lord" is useless  Jeff Spicoli | 10/25/05
Wow!!!  swoopee | 10/26/05
thank you  Jeff Spicoli | 10/26/05
thank you  Jeff Spicoli | 10/26/05
sorry for the double post  Jeff Spicoli | 10/26/05
Have you ever asked?  MildlyAmuzed | 10/26/05
thank you for the real response  Jeff Spicoli | 10/26/05
make up your mind  wresnick | 10/26/05
you unknowningly brought up a good point  Jeff Spicoli | 10/27/05
Comparative theology  G Fedorchuk | 11/15/05
WHITE half assed weenies?  G Fedorchuk | 11/15/05
Interesting....  Badgered | 02/26/07
No supernatural  movie-crew | 10/27/05
You said most of it...  sykandtyed | 10/26/05
organized religion is the sorriest racket  Jeff Spicoli | 10/26/05
organized religion is the sorriest racket  ErnieM | 10/27/05
Think so?  eaglenow | 10/27/05
Facts?  Stegosaurus Cowboy | 10/27/05
oh crap - posted in the wrong place  Stegosaurus Cowboy | 10/27/05
never mind  Stegosaurus Cowboy | 10/27/05
leading by example...  Chingo Bling | 01/10/07
Funny is our current President not a Jesus freak?  Laff | 10/26/05
Well well howru so sure that the Lord is useless ...  emmanuel.e | 10/26/05
Um are you talking to me or Jeff in the bulk of your reply?  Laff | 10/26/05
my take  voska | 10/26/05
Don't think a city was trunt to salt but a single person  Laff | 10/26/05
No, it's working  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
You kill me.....:)  Laff | 10/26/05
Good book to read on this subject  Jenae's Dad | 10/26/05
What's God got to cry about?  Laff | 10/26/05
That you don't love him sad  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
OK...here we go again...sigh:)  Laff | 10/26/05
Voska, Emmanuel, very well put! (NT)  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Religion was created by man  Protector | 10/26/05
Inextricably linked  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Self fulfilling prophecy...  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
I think religion is more about power  voska | 10/26/05
How?  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Only because big Game hunters kill them  voska | 10/26/05
Are you doing  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
Yes!  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Goshpel of Tomas  voska | 10/27/05
Pareidolia and Apophelia  panzrwagn | 10/26/05
I agree  voska | 10/26/05
RE: I agree by voska  btljooz | 10/27/05
God on Our Side  clockmendergb@... | 10/26/05
Re: Well well howru so sure that the Lord is useless ...  plumnilly | 10/26/05
No he isn't  movie-crew | 10/27/05
Funny  Spoon Jabber | 10/28/05
Oh that's going to save you!  Linux Guy 1000 | 10/26/05
The lord helps those who help themselves..circular!  Laff | 10/26/05
You have to start somewhere  voska | 10/26/05
Isin't God limitless?  Laff | 10/26/05
Not really  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Self inposed limitations aside I can't feel sorry for  Laff | 10/26/05
I know  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Which brings up right back around to circular/and belief.  Laff | 10/26/05
I think that's the differnce  voska | 10/26/05
Voska...I would not doubt that a cure for my disease exists  Laff | 10/26/05
What is reality to you?  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Read...wasn't impressed...:)  Laff | 10/26/05
OK, guess I'll have to get tough!  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Chaos and odds...Don't know, just said for me its seems a kinder concept..:  Laff | 10/26/05
Make with the pro Bush post already, or else!  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Um...he's very competant with incompitance?  Laff | 10/26/05
That's a start  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Make sure it's green...love the green kool aid..:)  Laff | 10/26/05
You have your belief  Linux User 147560 | 10/26/05
Funny  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Yes and it was science not religion that  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
They can, yes  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Absolutely!  Protector | 10/26/05
Not exactly  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
And you cannot  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
But my point...  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Are you on the Kansas School Board?  osreinstall | 10/26/05
The diabetic goes HA! to Intelligent Design and would instead call it  Laff | 10/26/05
Exactly  plumnilly | 10/26/05
Ought Ooo....  bchesmer | 10/26/05
All wrong  movie-crew | 10/27/05
not impossible  movie-crew | 10/27/05
As a fellow Christian  CobraA1 | 10/27/05
That's is a very good point!!  Laff | 10/27/05
Excellent post!  rapson | 10/27/05
You forget some important points  Spoon Jabber | 10/28/05
RFID chip implants  X Marks The Spot | 10/25/05
Nothing wrong in storing personal information in a chip  treg | 10/26/05
Yes, there is.  bweir13 | 10/26/05
?? Nothing wrong??  plumnilly | 10/26/05
He/she was right to a point  bchesmer | 10/26/05
Interesting use for RFID  Roger Ramjet | 10/26/05
It is but a small step in a larger plan...  Laff | 10/26/05
Time to get over it  Billosaur | 10/26/05
Don't own or do any of those things myself...and  Laff | 10/26/05
Why Worry  crjunk | 10/26/05
Why wrry...be happy/sappy:)  Laff | 10/26/05
Track Me  YuncoFoobar | 10/26/05
There Is NO Right To Privacy, Folks!  Doc Farmer | 10/26/05
Love the fact that life is not Risk FREE..however if there is  Laff | 10/26/05
...there is no right to life?  Doc Farmer | 10/26/05
In other words right or not I still demand it and will fight for it!  Laff | 10/26/05
And you have the right to fight for it!  Doc Farmer | 10/26/05
Message has been deleted.  plumnilly | 10/26/05
I hope you're not referring to me, PlumNilly...  Doc Farmer | 10/27/05
No right to privacy?  jbroche18 | 10/28/05
Should be "5th Amendment protects..."  jbroche18 | 10/28/05
That's The Problem...  Doc Farmer | 10/31/05
That's The Problem...  Doc Farmer | 10/31/05
You didn't read the whole Constitution.  osreinstall | 10/31/05
Ignorance of bible is no reason to fear RFID. Truth about 666.  adstock | 10/26/05
If it looks like a duck?  Laff | 10/26/05
Sorry Padre'  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
The if there is a God of love then it doesn't matter what i do.  adstock | 10/26/05
It has to be 7/ 24hour days  Angel D | 10/26/05
I disagree  voska | 10/27/05
Nobody But God  Angel D | 10/27/05
Mistaken?  Spoon Jabber | 10/28/05
Point out one inconsistancy in the bible  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Okay since I am at the office...  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
Wow!!!!  Laff | 10/26/05
Ball, outside  pwalters@... | 10/26/05
Is this another whole "You have to have the Holy Spirit" in you  Laff | 10/26/05
How so very  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
Solution #4  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Excellent googling, and you can find the rebuttles likewise.  hawkeyeaz1 | 10/26/05
That's a lot to read.  psychsys | 10/26/05
Nice copy & paste . . .  CobraA1 | 10/27/05
ZDNet needs an edit button  CobraA1 | 10/27/05
OUCH!  Linux User 147560 | 10/26/05
Gee got awful quiet...  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
Just finished your post, whew!  Spoon Jabber | 10/26/05
Continued  Spoon Jabber | 10/28/05
Reasoning from the scriptures  adstock | 11/01/05
Wow, thanks!  Spoon Jabber | 11/01/05
I am not religious but this is not accurate.  osreinstall | 10/26/05
The problem  movie-crew | 10/27/05
A solution?  CobraA1 | 10/27/05
Still a problem  movie-crew | 10/27/05
re: Still a problem  CobraA1 | 10/27/05
Nietzsche had some points.  osreinstall | 10/27/05
Ray Nietzche, of the Packers?  Spoon Jabber | 10/28/05
Go here spoon  osreinstall | 10/28/05
It was a joke  Spoon Jabber | 10/28/05
re: Nietzsche  CobraA1 | 10/28/05
Cobra go read up on him.  osreinstall | 10/28/05
re: Cobra go read up on him.  CobraA1 | 10/28/05
re: Cobra go read up on him.  CobraA1 | 10/28/05
Good Idea.  osreinstall | 10/28/05
ok, another post, just to clear things up a bit (i hope)  CobraA1 | 10/29/05
ok, another post, just to clear things up a bit (i hope)  CobraA1 | 10/29/05
You made yourself clear a few posts back.  osreinstall | 10/29/05
Southpark Episode 712 has the answer to the religion god/no god quarrels  triplea007_z | 10/27/05
Hmm . . .  CobraA1 | 10/27/05
No, nuns aren't paid to think about it...  ArtMac | 10/27/05
"pat"  CobraA1 | 10/29/05
Holy Moley...  ArtMac | 10/27/05
Two different things  Spoon Jabber | 10/28/05
Sorry Linux Advocate  CobraA1 | 10/27/05
Sorry but with the  Linux Advocate | 10/27/05
re: Sorry but with the  CobraA1 | 10/27/05
Reproduction  Zinoron | 10/27/05
Sign of the times  pwalters@... | 10/26/05
gargage  deezee | 10/26/05
knee jerk reaction  plumnilly | 10/26/05
Amazing how well people have been conditioned  adstock | 10/27/05
RFID "666" The Context (Syntax) of Sin and the freedom in the truth.  Reciprocal | 09/28/07
I Don't Remember Voting for the UN  bbbikerbabe | 10/26/05
The problem is the Democratic Republic that  Linux Advocate | 10/26/05
democratic republic=democracy or republic  daniel.kreis@... | 04/30/06
Identity Theft Worrisome; Nationality ID Worse  JRMcBride | 10/26/05
Wah wah wah  Marc L | 10/26/05
Stupidity  plumnilly | 10/26/05
Who's asking to be protected?  Laff | 10/26/05
What do you know...a PUSSY cat...:)  Laff | 10/26/05
Good technology, bad implementation  emiliosic | 10/26/05
Government tracking is NOT the problem  zijiang | 10/26/05
Government  movie-crew | 10/27/05
Why do they get to keep their anonymity?  3Dman | 10/26/05
Your Brain Implant is ready!  anthonycea | 10/26/05
RE: Your Brain Implant is ready! by anthonycea  btljooz | 10/27/05
Who designed the intelligent designer?  william.landaeta@... | 10/26/05
Yeah but  william.landaeta@... | 10/26/05
Yeah it's a good thing we attacked Iraq  william.landaeta@... | 10/26/05
Too much ado over nothing  jpgeorgia | 10/26/05
Information is power  LuckyCharm | 10/27/05
So,,,  ArtMac | 10/27/05
rfid implants  veteren1@... | 10/26/05
Hmmmm....  bchesmer | 10/26/05
Media causes histeria  FoxFord | 10/27/05
50cm seems enough to me...  triplea007_z | 10/27/05
Fear  jozelo | 10/27/05
Bad idea to use RFID in passports, here is a better solution.  iTjds | 10/27/05
RFID on people is a threat  Dr_Zinj | 10/27/05
rfid chip implants  rokker | 10/27/05
Of course this isn't for tracking...  ArtMac | 10/27/05
Just like Alabama found out about National ID  btljooz | 10/27/05
Interesting reading about the problems with National ID Implementation  btljooz | 10/27/05
Someone said a chip in your brain?  tjfoley | 10/27/05
They certainly DO USE it enough already  btljooz | 10/27/05
RFID  ken3005 | 10/27/05
Passport Chip Implants  jrmtay@... | 10/30/05
h  Reciprocal | 09/28/07
RE: Passports to get RFID chip implants  Got Brains | 08/21/08

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