Register

To become a member of ITProPortal Register here.

Already a member? Login here

Please register below. All we need is a valid email address and a password.

Please use a real email address as we need to email you to confirm your account.
Must be at least 6 characters long.

Benefits of joining ITProPortal:

  • Unlimited Access to Special Reports and White Papers
  • Exclusive offers and discounts
  • Free entry to all competitions
  • Access to beta sections of ITProPortal.com

Login to your account

Forgot your password?


Submit Register Cancel

A billion RF smart cards open to hacking

Author: Steve Gold| Date: 19 March 2008| Tags:  RFID
A billion RF smart cards open to hacking
  • IconText size Icon Icon

I nearly fell through the floor last night when I heard that the Dutch interior affairs minister has admitted that the MiFare chip technology seen in RF-enabled smart travel cards in the Netherlands - and London plus other places around the world - is open to hacking.

Guusje ter Horst is reported to have revealed that researchers at the Radboud University in Nijmegen have "developed a method by which a large number of Mifare chip-cards is relatively easy to crack and
duplicate."

Ter Horst wrote in a letter to the Dutch Parliament that she was preparing  supplemental security measures for some government buildings as a result of the findings.

The card technology is used in about two million travel and identity cards in the Netherlands, and around a billion (that's a lot) around the world.

MiFare's Web site, meanwhile, says its cards are in use by 500 million punters around the world. That's still a lot...

advertisement

Web Threat Level
brought to you by Trend Micro.