<http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2005-04-03-passports_x.htm>

USA Today
*



High-tech passports coming; complaints already in
By Mimi Hall, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON - The dark blue cover will look the same, but U.S. passports are
getting a high-tech makeover this year.

Blue-jacketed tourist passports, as well as the maroon-and-black-covered
ones used by diplomats and others on government business, are being
redesigned and going electronic. The goal is to make it harder to copy or
tamper with them, just as currency has been redesigned to fight
counterfeiting.

Monday is the last day for the public to submit comments on the plan to the
State Department. Among those who have complaints are privacy rights
activists and some business travelers worried that the new passports will
make Americans less safe abroad.

What's generating controversy is a computer chip that will be in a
passport's back cover. It will contain all the information now printed on
the first page of the passport, including name, date of birth, place of
birth, nationality, passport number and a digitized photo.

Border agents will use a machine to "read" the chip and verify a passport
holder's identity. "We're trying to reduce the market in stolen documents
and passport identity theft," says Frank Moss, head of the State
Department's passport office.

Moss says the new passports are part of a worldwide effort to make travel
safer and easier for legitimate passport-holders and to prevent terrorists
and other criminals from using fake or altered documents.

Foreigners from 27 countries who are not required to have visas to enter
the USA must have chips in new passports by October. Those countries
include Britain, Germany and Japan. The information is already encoded in
the visas of people who need them for work, travel or study in this country.

 The new U.S. passports will be issued to diplomats and other State
Department employees beginning in August. This fall or winter, the
government will begin issuing them to everyone who applies for a new or
renewed passport. Because most passports are good for 10 years, every
passport holder should have the new version by 2016.

Opponents of the plan say the new passports will make Americans more
vulnerable abroad. They say terrorists or other criminals could get hold of
machines that read the chips from a distance, which could allow them to
target tourists and business travelers.

"Terrorists, criminals and kidnappers would be able to easily identify
Americans," the Business Travel Coalition says. "Walking down a hotel
corridor, it would be simple to determine in which guest rooms Americans
were staying."

At issue is whether the chips can be read by machines that send out radio
signals and activate the chip to send back its information. The State
Department acknowledges that "skimming," or illegally reading the
information, could occur. Its notice in the Federal Register says a
chip-reader would have to be within 4 inches, but privacy advocate Bill
Scannell says a powerful reader could pick up the information from much
farther away.

 Moss says tests are being done to figure out how to prevent that. "We will
be putting anti-skimming technology into the passports," he says.

 Scannell, who has a Web site called www.RFIDkills.com (for radio-frequency
ID) says a terrorist could use a high-powered machine to scan a cafe and
determine how many Americans were inside.

 "Americans have enough things to worry about when traveling overseas.
Having an electronic bull's-eye on our backs shouldn't be one of them," his
Web site says.

But Moss says the passport cannot be read if it's closed. "We wouldn't ...
adopt a passport technology that was going to put people at risk as they
travel around the world," he says.

-- 
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R. A. Hettinga <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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