The security being developed for the government's ID
cards and biometric passports programmes has been thrown into
question after a Guardian reporter and a security expert
took just 48 hours to access encrypted data on a biometric
passport's RFID chip.
Although passports use military-grade encryption, Adam Laurie,
technical director at The Bunker, said the information used to form
the security key for the chip could be found using an online flight
booking site and flight coupons, which are often discarded at
airports.
With the information on the coupon a hacker could use an airline
website to gain all the basic customer data held on an
e-passport.
Laurie warned that, armed with the security key and a £100 RFID
reader, criminals would be able to decrypt and clone passports.
Comment on this article:
computer.weekly@rbi.co.uk