Researchers Find Problems With RFID Passport Cards
An anonymous reader writes "Researchers at the University of Washington have found that RFID tags used in two new types of border-crossing documents in the US are vulnerable to snooping and copying. The information in these tags could be copied on to another, off-the-shelf tag, which might be used to impersonate the legitimate holder of the card." You can also read the summary of the researchers' report.
Part of creating a more authoritarian society is to keep your populace under fear. To have the more knowledgeable elements of your population know just how close they are to losing their freedom due to a modern equivalent of a filing error is entirely intentional.
No-one in government/civil service wants these documents to be 100% secure. A few accidental misidentifications will keep everyone realising how powerless they are, and a few "accidental" misidentifications will be used to conveniently eliminate specific undesirables.
Summary: If you fear that your identity will be stolen now, the government is operating as intended.
Oh yeah. Nothing to worry about. One of the main stated reasons they started introducing these things was to facilitate entry to Great Britain. I've never been to Europe, have no planned trips there for maybe the rest of my life. Wonderful.
Another danger is that the tags can be read from as far as 150 feet away in some situations, so criminals could read them without being detected.
s/criminals/kidnappers/ which IS an issue in places I travel. Those RFID thingies shout out, "I'm an American citizen, kidnap me!".
Although the tags don't contain personal information, they could be used to track a person's movements through ongoing surveillance, they said.
See previous comment.
Though there's no reason for panic, "Our hearts should start to beat a little faster," Kohno said.
Bwahahahaha. Can I please have my paper only passport back, please? It's for my safety and think of my children.