This entry was posted on Monday, October 23rd, 2006 at 3:28 pm and is filed under Hardware, Privacy, Encryption. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
The Irish government has begun issuing RFID passports with biometric data that can be read at a distance to comply with US regulations for its visa waiver programme.
But unlike the RFID passports the USA is now issuing, the Irish ones lack a security feature preventing them from being skimmed, or read surreptitiously.
The US government has gone to the trouble of fitting its passports with a layer of foil that interferes with skimming attempts when the document is closed. The Irish government has not. A local lobbying outfit called Digital Rights Ireland (DRI) has complained that the new passports are ripe for remote privacy invasion. As of course they are.
Unfortunately, DRI has taken that a step further, fretting in a recent interview with the Sunday Times that the unprotected passports could leave Irish travelers “open to targeting by terrorists”.
Read More : The Register - Irish passports go RFID, and naked
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