US.gov tunes out
scathing RFID privacy report
The Register | Nov. 2, 2006
By John Leyden
An external security
advisory committee reporting to the US Department of Homeland
Security has produced a highlight critical report (PDF)
advising against the use of RFID technology in government documents.
But the scathing analysis remains
stuck in limbo, as a draft report, while the government pushes ahead
with plans to include RFID tags in everything from passport and
diving licences to library cards.
The Data Privacy and Integrity
Advisory Committee of the DHS concludes that RFID chips are useful
in inventory management but aren't suitable for human
identification, where privacy issues remain a concern. Using RFID
tags to identify miners or firefighters more quickly may be a
sensible use the technology. Where the technology falls down is
where it's used to verify identity, where the experts reckon it
offers little advantage over previous technology while creating the
possibility that data held on RFID chips might be intercepted by
undesirables.
"RFID appears to offer little
benefit when compared to the consequences it brings for privacy and
data integrity. Instead, it increases risks to personal privacy and
security, with no commensurate benefit for performance or national
security," the report states.
The experts advise that "RFID be
disfavored for identifying and tracking human beings. When DHS does
choose to use RFID to identify and track individuals, we recommend
the implementation of the specific security and privacy safeguards".
The draft report was criticised by
the RFID lobby when it came out in summer but a Homeland Security
spokesman denied suggestions that anyone is trying to spike the
study. "The committee is still soliciting input and the draft report
is on its website, so I guess they are proceeding," he said.
Civil liberties group the Center
for Democracy and Technology is also critical of the report because
of its failure to recognise the reality that RFID technology is
already widely deployed. The committee needs to produce suggestions
on how the RFID-chips can be more securely deployed instead of
advising government to avoid the technology. Jim Dempsey, the policy
director for the CDT, told Wired that the report was
"off-target".
Jim Harper, a Cato Institute
fellow and member of the advisory committee, remains hopeful that
the committee will vote to publish the report so that it can
influence the PASS card, an RFID-based system designed to act as an
alternative to passports for US citizens returning from neighbouring
countries such as Mexico and Canada from 2008. "If we don't have a
report out before the (PASS card) comment period ends, then we are
irrelevant," Harper
told
Wired. ®
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