• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
iotphoenix
  • Home
  • Tech

    Cisco, AWS integrate IoT, edge network software and services

    5G research by DARPA will lead to commercial applications

    Siemens and Google Cloud team to deliver AI-based manufacturing solutions

    Will Apple’s Internet of Things vision hurt a beautiful idea?

    Katherine the White Shark crashes research site’s servers

    TCP/IP stack vulnerabilities threaten IoT devices

    Trending Tags

    • IIoT
    • You’re probably doing your IIoT implementation wrong
    • Splunk debuts IIoT product for in-depth analytics
  • Mobile
  • Internet of Things
  • Technology Industry
  • Networking
  • Software
  • Cloud Computing
  • Security
  • Home
  • Tech

    Cisco, AWS integrate IoT, edge network software and services

    5G research by DARPA will lead to commercial applications

    Siemens and Google Cloud team to deliver AI-based manufacturing solutions

    Will Apple’s Internet of Things vision hurt a beautiful idea?

    Katherine the White Shark crashes research site’s servers

    TCP/IP stack vulnerabilities threaten IoT devices

    Trending Tags

    • IIoT
    • You’re probably doing your IIoT implementation wrong
    • Splunk debuts IIoT product for in-depth analytics
  • Mobile
  • Internet of Things
  • Technology Industry
  • Networking
  • Software
  • Cloud Computing
  • Security
No Result
View All Result
iotphoenix
No Result
View All Result
Home Networking

Security expert cracks RFID chip in U.K. passport

in Networking
0 0
0
SHARES
15
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A security expert has cracked one of the U.K.’s new biometric passports, which the British government hopes will cut down on cross-border crime and illegal immigration.

The attack, which uses a common RFID reader and customized code, siphoned data off an RFID chip from a passport in a sealed envelope, said Adam Laurie, a security consultant who has worked with RFID and Bluetooth technology. The attack would be invisible to victims, he said.

“That’s the really scary thing,” said Laurie, whose work was detailed in the Sunday edition of the Daily Mail newspaper. “There’s no evidence of tampering. They’re not going to report something has happened because they don’t know.”

The British government, which began issuing RFID passports about a year ago, eventually wants to incorporate fingerprints and other biometric data on the chips, although privacy activists are concerned over how data will be stored and handled.

Currently, the chip contains the printed details on the passports, the person’s photograph and security technology to detect if those files have been altered.

The attack was executed while the passport was still in its original envelope used to send it from the passport service, because RFID chips can be read from a few inches away, Laurie said. He used a passport ordered by a woman affiliated with No2ID, a group that opposes the U.K.’s biometric passport and ID card programs.

The data on the passport’s chip is locked until an RFID reader provides the encryption key, Laurie said. The encryption key is calculated using a combination of the person’s personal data, such as date of birth, and is contained in the “machine-readable zone” (MZR) — the string of characters and digits on the bottom of the passport’s first page.

At an immigration desk, the optical character reader scans the MZR and gets the key. The RFID chip is unlocked, and the information on the chip is matched with that on the passport.

However, Laurie was able to do this process himself. He analyzed ICAO 9303, the standard from the International Civil Aviation Organization that been adopted worldwide for machine-readable passports, to see how the MZR is organized.

Laurie also knew some of the woman’s personal details — used to calculate her passport’s key — and found out more through Internet research.

He then wrote what’s known as a “brute force” program, which repeatedly tries different combinations of data to discover the key. After about 40,000 attempts by the program, he cracked the key.

To scan the chip, he used a common RFID reader from ACG ID, now part of Assa Abloy Identification Technology GmbH of Germany.

The attack could then let Laurie begin the process of making an exact copy of the woman’s passport.

The biometric passport has been sold to us as something that increases the security of the passport, “but so far I don’t see anything about it that increases my security,” Laurie said.

The greatest weakness with the passports is using relatively easy-to-find data to compose the encrypted key, Laurie said. It would be better to include more random elements that would render brute-force style programs nearly useless, he said.

Laurie’s work spawned from concern over how users can know what’s on their passport’s chip.

“At the moment, if you want to see what’s in your own passport, you have to go to passport office,” Laurie said. “With my code, you can do it at home.”

Laurie has published a library of open source tools written in the Python programming language that will run on RFID readers made by ACG and by Frosch Electronics OEG, based in Austria.

Join the Network World communities on Facebook and LinkedIn to comment on topics that are top of mind.

Copyright © 2007 IDG Communications, Inc.

Download WordPress Themes Free
Free Download WordPress Themes
Premium WordPress Themes Download
Premium WordPress Themes Download
free download udemy paid course
download huawei firmware
Download Nulled WordPress Themes
lynda course free download
Tags: Security expert cracks RFID chip in U.K. passport
Next Post

UPDATE: Black Hat: Much ado about RFID

Recommended

Slideshow: Beyond passwords

New Microsoft BizTalk Server coming in Sept.

RFID boosts supply chain performance

Loading

Category

  • Analysis
  • Careers
  • Cloud Computing
  • Data Center
  • Data Centers
  • Databases
  • Guest Opinions
  • Hardware
  • Infrastructure
  • Insider Insights
  • Internet of Things
  • IT Leadership
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • New Connections
  • News
  • Open Source
  • Opinion
  • Research
  • Security
  • Software
  • Software Development
  • Technology Industry
  • Uncategorized
  • Unified Communications
  • Videos
  • Virtualization
  • WAN

About Us

Get updated with latest IOT related news and information with us.

© 2024 iotphoenix.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Internet of Things
  • Security
  • WAN
  • Cloud Computing
  • Data Centers
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Software
  • Technology Industry

© 2024 iotphoenix.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In