Hackers Clone E-Passport
mrops writes "I guess the skeptical Slashdot community always knew that e-passports are a big waste of time and money; now German security consultants have been able to successfully clone e-passports, even onto building access cards. FTA: 'The whole passport design is totally brain damaged,' Grunwald says. 'From my point of view all of these RFID passports are a huge waste of money. They're not increasing security at all.'"
While the headline sounds scary, when you examine it closer, this isn't really surprising. The ability to copy the passport is not the issue here. The key point of the technology was to have the issuing government digitally sign the information contained in the passport. This means that a forger cannot simply tip-ex out the name and and put in a new one ;-)
The article did not mention if the German passport contains bio-metric data. i.e. a digital copy of the photo.
This combined with a digital signature of the photo would make the system very secure indeed.
The passport inspector simply scans the data and compares the photo to the person standing before him.
I don't see how this "hack" compromises the security of the system, except in cases where the inspecting authority misuses or misunderstands the basis of security in the system.
There are only 10 types of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't!
I believe that those anti-static bags that many computer boards come in will block an RFID signal. They certainly look exactly like the bag I was given with my RFID remote toll-paying tag, and putting the tag in the bag supposedly blocks it from being read.
/. for you! ;) )
(What, you don't have any old computer parts in their original anti-static bags?!? That's it, no
[command INSERTWITTYQUIP failed: insufficient wit]
So he cloned a passport. As in, a verbatim copy with the same name, date of birth, etc. He explicitly says that he _can't_ (at the moment) change his name, date of birth, etc, because of the hashes.
So his grand achievement is... what? That that a fellow called John Smith could thus make a fake passport that still says John Smith?
Ah yes, so he could clone someone else's chip, if he can steal their passport, and place it on his own passport. Except now he has a passport that says John Smith and a chip that says Jane Doe. As he himself acknowledges it, it will work only if someone at the border/airport/whatever would just swipe the thing over a reader, but not bother actually reading it. And, oh, if also their scanner is broken and doesn't also read the "John Smith" printed in OCR letters on the real pass.
It sounds like some clever hack, but frankly, then what's the improvement over just stealing a passport and using it as it is? If the condition of passing for Jane Doe instead of John Smith is hoping that they'll just swipe it over the reader and not actually look at it, then simply a stolen passport would work just as well and with far less of a hassle.
So, basically, this is just someone's verbal masturbation, rather than some clever hack.
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
Get it done anyway - come October the price of a renewal goes up to cover the costs of the RFID system.
Safe from surreptitious cloning? Big deal. You routinely hand over your passport at hotels, etc... while in Europe.
I think Israeli citzens are still numero uno on the terrorist hit lists.
And thanks to "poodle" Blair, UK citizens are not a very distant third.
Don't German security consultants also specialize in building super-bunkers for Islamic terror states like Iran?
And now they've compromised the future US passport as well?
3 words to describe this -
state sponsored terrorism.
I know you are humorous. But you are insightful in your humor. See how easy it is to put something against anyone in the "war on terror" ? Now in three sentences, that is far-fetching, but if it was released day after day in news report, I am confident you could turn the majority of US opinion against any country in the world.
The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
Nope, the keys for my marina are RFID and I tested this very thing. The machine read the card as usual.
Say bad words about my book, in cold oatmeal, or I shall sue!
They've got passport cases, wallets, and wallet inserts that block RFID and other electromagnetic signals. Emvelope.com
I think this will meet your needs: http://www.emvelope.com/products
Appearently, the US Government will be doing exactly this - they have hashes to prevent altering the data and human inspectors to prevent data mismatch.
Still, is RFID that's activatable without human intervention really necessary? I say no.
Is lack of encryption irresponsible? I say yes.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
The German passports do not employ the optional active authentication standard as specified by ICAO. Active authentication means that there is a private key within the passport. This private key can be used in a challenge-response authentication of the passport chip. The public key itself is stored in a data group on the passport, which is protected against alteration in the same way the biometric data is protected against alteration (a digital signature from the state).
I %20mrtds%20ICC%20read-only%20access%20v1_1.pdf
Nobody seems bothered to even *look* at the ICAO specifications, including 100% of the previous responses on e-Passports on slashdot. Why the hell should politicians even bother with citizens if not even the technological top 1% takes an interest?
http://www.icao.int/mrtd/download/documents/TR-PK
Check out chapter 2.3.2, 3.2.2, Annex D, Annex G.1.2
Excellent detective work, thanks!
I checked online with my state issuing authority (Maryland, US) for my toll-paying RFID tag, and I was able to request online that they send me 4 (the limit) free "read-prevention bags". This may only be of use to those in the northeastern US, but if any toll collector in your area uses a similar device, you might be able to find a bag easily.
[command INSERTWITTYQUIP failed: insufficient wit]
Renew your passport at a consulate overseas. Incidentally, this is also much quicker than renewing it in the UK (typically takes 2 weeks). The only snags are the obvious ones that you need to stay out of the UK for long enough to get your new passport, and you need an overseas address (maybe a friend's).
I would not advise trying the obvious trick of just mailing your old passport to a friend in country X with all the forms, and asking them to post them to the consulate as though you were in X, then post the passport back to you when it arrives at their address. Cross-border postal mail is checked more often than most people realize, and I have heard of cases where identity documents have been removed.
The RFID chip is only the first step.
The current chip contains a scanned photo. Future passports will be issued with an ID card which means going to an enrolment centre to get your iris and finger prints scanned and entering all your details into the national identity register. The iris scan may or may not be included in the passport RFID chip and the fingerprints won't be at first.
The price of passports will go up from 51 pounds to 66 pounds in october (they were only 42 pounds last year!) to cover the costs and may rise again when ID card start being issued.
Anyone who wants to avoid the National Identity Register should join the renew for freedom campaign and renew their passport early. It is too late to avoid the biometric passport with RFID, but you will stay off of the NIR and will not have to provide fingerprints and iris scans in person. It will cost you 51 pounds but may well be worth it to avoid having to tell the Identity and Passport service every time you move house.
A latent existence
--jeffk++
ipv6 is my vpn