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TSA Concept Video Shows Future RFID-Enabled
Airport
Spychips In Passports May Be Just The Start,
Warn Privacy Advocates
Katherine Albrecht / SpyChips.com | August 15 2006
RFID-laced passports may be just the start
of an Orwellian airport experience, warn privacy advocates and authors Katherine
Albrecht and Liz McIntyre as the nation braces for a rollout of the controversial
technology in passports this week.
They point to a U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) concept
video created by CompEx Inc. that shows how citizens can be tracked and
monitored throughout an airport terminal -- without their knowledge or consent.
The animated flash clip is posted on the authors' website at: http://www.spychips.com/RFIDairport.html
In the video, citizen "Bob" is remotely identified and tracked
via Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) devices as he enters an airport
and navigates to his gate. The video ends with chilling frames of a government
agent surreptitiously scanning Bob and his belongings as he sits in the
waiting area.
CompEx Inc. President Aram Kovach, who developed the film as a demo for
the TSA, received a U.S. Patent for the idea he calls "Method for Tracking
and Processing Passengers and their Transported Articles" in November
of 2005. According to company press releases, TSA officials entertained
his ideas twice, once in 2002 and once in 2003, and "offered to direct
CompEx in pursuing a segmented objective within the guidelines they have
set forth."
"This footage raises the specter of Soviet-style government surveillance
creeping onto our free soil," said McIntyre. "People need to know
that our government has actively considered these disturbing and invasive
RFID concepts. With RFID now appearing in our passports, the threat to our
privacy and civil liberties may be more than theoretical."
"RFID passports will do little to keep us safer," Albrecht added.
"On the contrary, by requiring us to carry RFID tags in our travel
documents, the government is jeopardizing our personal information while
doing little to slow down the bad guys."
The new passports are vulnerable to hacking and cloning by criminals. Last
week at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas, German researcher
Lukas Grunwald showed how easily a criminal or terrorist could clone RFID
tags like those in U.S. passports using inexpensive and readily available
hardware.
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ABOUT "SPYCHIPS"
Liz McIntyre and Katherine Albrecht are the authors of "Spychips: How
Major Corporations Plan to Track your Every Move with RFID." The book
draws on patent documents, corporate source materials, conference proceedings,
and firsthand interviews to paint a convincing -- and frightening -- picture
of the consumer privacy threat posed by RFID.
Despite its hundreds of footnotes and academic-level accuracy, the book
remains lively and readable according to critics, who have called it a "techno-thriller"
and "a masterpiece of technocriticism."
Two days prior to its release in 2005, "Spychips" flew the top
of the Amazon bestseller charts, hitting number one as a "Mover &
Shaker," making its way to the top-ten Nonfiction bestseller list,
and spending weeks as a Current Events bestseller. In a nod to the book's
focus on freedom, Spychips was awarded the prestigious Lysander Spooner
Award for Advancing the Literature of Liberty and named "the year's
best book on liberty."
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