Identity, Security, Payments, Biometrics, Smart Cards and Authentication News

RFID Sabotages Privacy, Says Government Watchdog

Tuesday, December 5, 2006

“RFID may be good for tracking produce, but is an expensive, intrusive way to track people.”

That’s the verdict issued Monday by Citizens Against Government Waste, an organization with the stated mission of eliminating “waste, fraud, mismanagement and abuse in government.”

As part of this assessment, CAGW issued two draft reports to the Department of Homeland Security: Border Security: PASS Card Fails on Cost, Privacy and Real ID: Big Brother Could Cost Big Money, criticizing the use of RFID for identification purposes.


Citizens Against Government Waste Backs Anti-RFID Report

Contact: Alexa Moutevelis, 202-467-5318, Tom Finnigan (after hours), 202-253-3852, both for Citizens Against Government Waste

WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 /U.S. Newswire/ – Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) today encouraged the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Data Privacy and Integrity Advisory Committee to pass a subcommittee report that recommends against the use of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology for personal identification. The full committee meets on December 6.

“RFID may be good for tracking produce, but is an expensive, intrusive way to track people,” said CAGW President Tom Schatz. “We strongly urge the Privacy Advisory Committee to adopt this report in its current form.”

The subcommittee report, The Use of RFID for Human Identification, finds that RFID technology “is no more resistant to forgery or tampering than any other digital technology … (and) exposes identification processes to security weaknesses that non-radio-frequency-based processes do not share.” Other privacy concerns include an individual’s inability to choose when he or she is identified and what information is read. The subcommittee also proposes safeguards for the use of RFID such as notification of and ability to control when and what information is collected and by whom, enhanced security for chip readers and databases, and limited collection and storage of data.

CAGW has released two reports, Border Security: PASS Card Fails on Cost, Privacy and Real ID: Big Brother Could Cost Big Money, criticizing the use of RFID for identification purposes. In particular, the disadvantages of embedding an RFID chip, or electronic beacon, on the new PASS Card outweigh any potential advantages. The Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, slated to go in effect in 2008, will require U.S. citizens and all travelers to show a PASS Card or other DHS-approved document in order to enter the U.S., Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean.

“The use of RFID for human identification burdens taxpayers and leaves Americans vulnerable to potential invasions of privacy with only minimal benefits. We hope DHS will heed the advice of the subcommittee’s report and not recommend the use of this expensive and ineffective technology,” Schatz concluded.

A link to the Draft Report from the DHS Emerging Applications and Technology Subcommittee can be found at http://www.cagw.org.


Citizens Against Government Waste is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating waste, fraud, mismanagement and abuse in government. [end] 

The South African Ministry of Home Affairs announced the expansion of its smart ID card pilot program, reports IT Web.

According to Home Affairs director-general Mkuseli Apleni, the smart ID card program is part of an effort by the national government to shed its racist past and create one identification card for all citizens. It will replace the current civic and immigration identity systems and capture demographic and biometric data of all South Africans and foreign nationals.

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Report includes BYOD requirement, new solutions for identity

The White House Office of Management and Budget released a digital government strategy report, “Digital Government: Building a 21st Century Platform to Better Serve the American People.”

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Brazil’s National Institute of Information Technology (ITI) has granted NSH-1 compliance for ICP-Brazil to Watchdata Technologies’ WatchKey USB PKI security token. This is the first USB PKI security token on the market to meet the ITI standards.

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By Gina Jordan, contributing editor, Avisian Publishing

The Canadian government is working with financial services companies to enable consumer’s to use bank-issued credentials and payment cards for access to government services, negating the need for special purpose IDs and passwords that are infrequently used and thus difficult to remember.

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British Columbia plans to introduce new smart care card which will hold a picture and security chip, but not without opposition.

Darrell Evans, program director for the BC Freedom of Information and Privacy Association, is concerned that the new cards could leak information, reports CBCnews.ca

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Gemalto announced it has been appointed by Oman Information Technology Authority (ITA) as prime contractor to secure the country’s eGovernment services. The full solution encompasses strong authentication and digital signature using the eID card, as well as mobile authentication using a mobile handset.

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