Elvis Presley’s Ultra-Secure, 2008 Passport?
by Mark Nestmann
Elvis died
in 1977.
But that didnt
prevent hackers from inserting his digital photo into a U.K. passport,
and using it at a self-service passport machine at Amsterdams
Schiphol airport to gain clearance to board a plane.
This incident
occurred in September 2008. But this security vulnerability persists,
as proven by the recent assassination of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, a senior
Hamas operative, in a Dubai hotel on January 20
The alleged
killers of Mr. Mabhouh included 11 people holding U.K. and other
European passports. All of the killers used passports containing
fake photographs and signatures.
Naturally,
this wasnt supposed to happen. When governments began issuing
digitally encoded passports a few years ago, it was supposed to
improve border security. For instance, Maura Harty, former U.S.
assistant secretary of state for consular affairs, told a Congressional
hearing in 2004:
Embedding
biometrics into U.S. passports to establish a clear link between
the person issued the passport and the user is an important step
forward in the international effort to strengthen border security.
Only, the technology
doesnt work.
Indeed, the
ultra-secure RFID chips digital passports contain can
be cloned with about $100 worth of off-the-shelf electronic equipment.
As a result, we have teams of assassins and who-knows-who-else roaming
the world with digitally modified passports. Indeed, digital passports
actually are far less secure than their predecessors.
The reason
is that digital passports and indeed digital data in general
suffers from an inherent security flaw
If you take
a non-digital passport and try to modify it physically, its
very hard to do so without leaving some evidence of what youve
done. There might be smudges, ink marks, or microscopic impressions
of a razor blade used to cut out an old photo and insert a new one.
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the rest of the article
March
12, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 The Sovereign Society
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