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By Declan McCullagh, News.com
Posted on ZDNet News: Apr 19, 2006 1:31:00 AM

ARLINGTON, Va.--Future government-issued travel documents may feature embedded computer chips that can be read at a distance of up to 30 feet, a top Homeland Security official said Tuesday, creating what some fear would be a threat to privacy.

Jim Williams, director of the Department of Homeland Security's US-VISIT program, told a smart card conference here that such tracking chips could be inserted into the new generation of wallet-size identity cards used to ease travel by Americans to Canada and Mexico starting in 2008. Those chips use radio frequency identification technology, or RFID.

"If you haven't been to some of our busiest land crossings, I always refer to them as economic choke points...We ought to use technology to improve that," said Williams, whose office operates the biometric program used to verify that the fingerprint of a person using a U.S. visa to cross a U.S. border matches that of the person who was issued the visa.

Williams' remarks at an industry conference are likely to heighten privacy concerns about RFID technology, which has drawn fire from activists and prompted hearings before the U.S. Congress and the Federal Trade Commission. One California politician has even introduced anti-RFID legislation.

Many of the privacy worries center on whether RFID tags--typically miniscule chips with an antenna a few inches long that can transmit a unique ID number--can be read from afar. If the range is a few inches, the privacy concerns are reduced. But at ranges of 30 feet, the tags could theoretically be read by hidden sensors alongside the road, in the mall or in the hands of criminals hoping to identify someone on the street by his or her ID number.

Williams defended a remotely readable RFID'ed identity card to audience members who suggested selecting one that could be scanned from only a few inches away. Border police oppose that idea because "they're concerned about people dropping cards, about people sticking their hands out the window," he said. "They don't think that meets their mission needs"--that is, speeding up the border-crossing process.

Those forthcoming cards, called "PASS" (for People Access Security Service), are part of a federal requirement that, starting Jan. 1, 2008, anyone entering the United States from Mexico or Canada must carry a passport or "alternative" travel document. Homeland Security envisions that document will take the form of a "vicinity-read" wallet-size card that will capture information from a distance and automatically display the cardholder's picture and other biographic information on the border agent's computer screen.

Homeland Security has said, in a government procurement notice posted in September, that "read ranges shall extend to a minimum of 25 feet" in RFID-equipped identification cards used for border crossings. For people crossing on a bus, the proposal says, "the solution must sense up to 55 tokens."

The notice, unearthed by an anti-RFID advocacy group, also specifies: "The government requires that IDs be read under circumstances that include the device being carried in a pocket, purse, wallet, in traveler's clothes or elsewhere on the person of the traveler....The traveler should not have to do anything to prepare the device to be read, or to present the device for reading--i.e., passive and automatic use."

An internal agency spat?
But Homeland Security could run into some internal opposition in the form of the State Department, which appears to be leaning toward the "proximity" method instead of remotely readable RFID'ed identity cards.

"We think proximity read offers greater security protections," Frank Moss, deputy assistant secretary of state for passport services, said Tuesday. That method would also have a better chance of getting past the scrutiny of privacy advocates in the requisite rule-making process, added Moss, who joked that he had been labeled the "anti-Christ" by one person who commented on the State Department's e-passport proposals.

RFID chips are already going to appear in U.S. passports starting in October 2006, the Bush administration ruled last October. And the possibility of RFID-implanted drivers' licenses because of the Real ID Act has caused New Hampshire's House of Representatives to disavow the proposal entirely.

Moss ticked off a list of reasons why Americans shouldn't be concerned about the safety of RFID'ed passports any longer. He admitted the State Department was wrong to claim last year that the e-passport chips could be read within only 10 centimeters. He credited the scathing comments from privacy watchdogs for the agency's decision to adopt two safeguards: a cryptographic technique known as basic access control and "antiskimming material" on the passport's front cover, which "greatly complicates" the capture of data when the book is fully or mostly closed, Moss said.

The government agencies said they need to reach an agreement on the RFID technology they'll use in the next month so that they can begin soliciting proposals from private firms for the chip's design. They hope to begin producing the PASS cards no later than nine months from now, Moss said.

"What we're putting in the card is possibly nothing but a 96-digit serial number that is random and would do nothing but point back to a database...someone would have to hack into our database at the same time," Homeland Security's Williams said, adding that the agency is considering delivering the cards in a "Mylar sleeve that would block the technology when people aren't using it." They're also exploring using a card that would have to be activated by the user, through a fingerprint or some other biometric method, before any information could be read remotely.

ARLINGTON, Va.--Future government-issued travel documents may feature embedded computer chips that can be read at a distance of up to 30 feet, a top Homeland Security official said Tuesday, creating what some fear would be a threat to privacy.

Jim Williams, director of the Department of Homeland Security's US-VISIT program, told a smart card conference here that such tracking chips could be inserted into the new generation of wallet-size identity cards used to ease travel by Americans to Canada and Mexico starting in 2008. Those chips use radio frequency identification technology, or RFID.

"If you haven't been to some of our busiest land crossings, I always refer to them as economic choke points...We ought to use technology to improve that," said Williams, whose office operates the biometric program used to verify that the fingerprint of a person using a U.S. visa to cross a U.S. border matches that of the person who was issued the visa.

Williams' remarks at an industry conference are likely to heighten privacy concerns about RFID technology, which has drawn fire from activists and prompted hearings before the U.S. Congress and the Federal Trade Commission. One California politician has even introduced anti-RFID legislation.

Many of the privacy worries center on whether RFID tags--typically miniscule chips with an antenna a few inches long that can transmit a unique ID number--can be read from afar. If the range is a few inches, the privacy concerns are reduced. But at ranges of 30 feet, the tags could theoretically be read by hidden sensors alongside the road, in the mall or in the hands of criminals hoping to identify someone on the street by his or her ID number.

Williams defended a remotely readable RFID'ed identity card to audience members who suggested selecting one that could be scanned from only a few inches away. Border police oppose that idea because "they're concerned about people dropping cards, about people sticking their hands out the window," he said. "They don't think that meets their mission needs"--that is, speeding up the border-crossing process.

Those forthcoming cards, called "PASS" (for People Access Security Service), are part of a federal requirement that, starting Jan. 1, 2008, anyone entering the United States from Mexico or Canada must carry a passport or "alternative" travel document. Homeland Security envisions that document will take the form of a "vicinity-read" wallet-size card that will capture information from a distance and automatically display the cardholder's picture and other biographic information on the border agent's computer screen.

Homeland Security has said, in a government procurement notice posted in September, that "read ranges shall extend to a minimum of 25 feet" in RFID-equipped identification cards used for border crossings. For people crossing on a bus, the proposal says, "the solution must sense up to 55 tokens."

The notice, unearthed by an anti-RFID advocacy group, also specifies: "The government requires that IDs be read under circumstances that include the device being carried in a pocket, purse, wallet, in traveler's clothes or elsewhere on the person of the traveler....The traveler should not have to do anything to prepare the device to be read, or to present the device for reading--i.e., passive and automatic use."

An internal agency spat?
But Homeland Security could run into some internal opposition in the form of the State Department, which appears to be leaning toward the "proximity" method instead of remotely readable RFID'ed identity cards.

"We think proximity read offers greater security protections," Frank Moss, deputy assistant secretary of state for passport services, said Tuesday. That method would also have a better chance of getting past the scrutiny of privacy advocates in the requisite rule-making process, added Moss, who joked that he had been labeled the "anti-Christ" by one person who commented on the State Department's e-passport proposals.

RFID chips are already going to appear in U.S. passports starting in October 2006, the Bush administration ruled last October. And the possibility of RFID-implanted drivers' licenses because of the Real ID Act has caused New Hampshire's House of Representatives to disavow the proposal entirely.

Moss ticked off a list of reasons why Americans shouldn't be concerned about the safety of RFID'ed passports any longer. He admitted the State Department was wrong to claim last year that the e-passport chips could be read within only 10 centimeters. He credited the scathing comments from privacy watchdogs for the agency's decision to adopt two safeguards: a cryptographic technique known as basic access control and "antiskimming material" on the passport's front cover, which "greatly complicates" the capture of data when the book is fully or mostly closed, Moss said.

The government agencies said they need to reach an agreement on the RFID technology they'll use in the next month so that they can begin soliciting proposals from private firms for the chip's design. They hope to begin producing the PASS cards no later than nine months from now, Moss said.

"What we're putting in the card is possibly nothing but a 96-digit serial number that is random and would do nothing but point back to a database...someone would have to hack into our database at the same time," Homeland Security's Williams said, adding that the agency is considering delivering the cards in a "Mylar sleeve that would block the technology when people aren't using it." They're also exploring using a card that would have to be activated by the user, through a fingerprint or some other biometric method, before any information could be read remotely.

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As a matter of fact the NY Times has ...
... shown a definite liberal bias and has consistently published an anti-Bush agenda. The other guy was fired and has an axe to grind.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: ShadeTree Posted on: 04/24/06 You are currently: Logged In | Log out
And so it starts... Linux User 147560   | 04/18/06
This makes me gag! rogueOne   | 04/19/06
only border crossings longofest   | 04/19/06
For a few years anyway. Bill4   | 04/19/06
only one border crossing jimbo_z   | 04/19/06
"Privilege"? ASkillz   | 04/19/06
Not sure where to start here...... jcbick   | 04/19/06
If you weren't sure where to start, you should've never started. ASkillz   | 04/19/06
are you nuts? Protector   | 04/19/06
Take a deep breath ASkillz   | 04/19/06
typo-- ASkillz   | 04/19/06
I think what they are Whoda thunk!   | 04/19/06
Another bad idea. bboyce@...   | 04/19/06
Simple solution - Reynolds Wrap Roger Ramjet   | 04/19/06
why go through the effort longofest   | 04/19/06
While your at it ... ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
Kind of extreme you ask me voska   | 04/19/06
Even simpler solution Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Earth to Major Tom Roger Ramjet   | 04/19/06
Words of Wisdom ASkillz   | 04/19/06
I thought about leaving, moving Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Was this before or after you put all that good ... ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
Sounds like someone one is very angry with Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
You do sound angry and then ... ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
What's your damage? ASkillz   | 04/19/06
You misunderstand Roger Ramjet   | 04/20/06
What congress wants seems not to be a reflection of Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Have you asked all the people in the U.S. ... ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
Well there is this one part that says something to the Laff   | 04/19/06
Democracy: ASkillz   | 04/19/06
I believe many of our founding farthers struggled with Laff   | 04/19/06
Well if we are going to be literal then ... ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
True...but the farthers were wise enough to not cast Laff   | 04/19/06
This is not a democracy... Whoda thunk!   | 04/19/06
Well Shade I think you are wrong... Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Linux User it is you who is wrong. ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
Yes and we have ID's already in place Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Some of you guys got it wrong... osreinstall   | 04/19/06
osreinstall ShadeTree   | 04/20/06
Shadetree osreinstall   | 04/20/06
Already on the market tic swayback   | 04/19/06
Good Grief! Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Good grief is right Charlie Brown. ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
Is it really that much of a stretch? Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Streeeeeeeeeeeeeeetch ASkillz   | 04/19/06
yes the typical Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
What color is the sky in ... ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
Light blue and clear of any clouds! Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
What are you doing? ASkillz   | 04/19/06
I am doing nothing wrong but to be treated Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Times have changed. ASkillz   | 04/19/06
RE: Times have changed. Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Busted! ASkillz   | 04/19/06
Sheep zclayton2   | 04/20/06
I wonder if... voska   | 04/20/06
Why compare our regime to the 3rd Reich? osreinstall   | 04/20/06
Just because we refuse to take your ... ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
Read the whole story... Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Sorry... ASkillz   | 04/19/06
You most definitely in the minority! ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
So when presented with an argument of defense Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
You need to learn the difference between ... ShadeTree   | 04/20/06
So now the NY Times Linux User 147560   | 04/20/06
As a matter of fact the NY Times has ... ShadeTree   | 04/24/06
Doing wrong is a very tricky thing to trust in. Laff   | 04/19/06
Whoa Nelly! ASkillz   | 04/19/06
you did it again Protector   | 04/19/06
just wrong Protector   | 04/19/06
If I catch my neighbor... ASkillz   | 04/19/06
The only time you have to produce papers on demand Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Linux User, try boarding a plane or ... ShadeTree   | 04/19/06
That is what a passport is Linux User 147560   | 04/19/06
Not only does it sound far fetched ... ShadeTree   | 04/20/06
Well to be fair criminals have been a paradox... Laff   | 04/20/06
Farfetched? Linux User 147560   | 04/20/06
Don't call me Nelly....:) Laff   | 04/19/06
Flawed thinking voska   | 04/20/06
Hmmm Whoda thunk!   | 04/19/06
I take a historical point of view..... Laff   | 04/19/06
I think my dear friend, that Whoda thunk!   | 04/19/06
Problem is once we find out......It very well maybe too late. Laff   | 04/19/06
Schodinger's Cat birdofire@...   | 04/19/06
Uncertaintly birdofire@...   | 04/20/06
Again based on history and the naature of man I'm not Laff   | 04/20/06
Sure beats a 45 year old birth certificate Roger Ramjet   | 04/20/06
I will grant you that as an purely informative tool in Laff   | 04/20/06

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