By
Robert Lemos
Thursday, July 29 2004 09:53 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39188522,00.htm
LAS VEGAS--Privacy advocates may not be
the only people taking issue with the current crop of radio-frequency
identification tags--merchants will likely have problems with a lack of
security as well, a German technology consultant said Wednesday.
Low-cost RFID tags--many which are smaller than a nickel and cost less too--are already being added to packaging by retailers
to keep track of inventory but could be abused by hackers and
tech-savvy shoplifters, said Lukas Grunwald, a senior consultant with
DN-Systems Enterprise Solutions GmbH. While the technology mostly
threatens consumer privacy, the new technology could allow thieves to
fool merchants by changing the identity of goods, he said.
"This is a huge risk for companies," Grunwald said during a discussion
at the Black Hat Security Briefings here. "It opens a whole new area
for shoplifting as well as chaos attacks."
While expensive RFID reader hardware and hard-to-use software have
hindered security research in the area, Grunwald said that's no longer
a hurdle. The security expert announced during the session a new
software tool that he helped create that can be used to read and
reprogram radio tags.
When such tools become widely available, hackers and those with less
pure motives could use a handheld device and the software to mark
expensive goods as cheaper items and walk out through self checkout.
Underage hackers could attempt to bypass age restrictions on alcoholic
drinks and adult movies, and pranksters could create confusion by
randomly swapping tags, requiring that a store do manual inventory.
Grunwald's software program, RFDump,
makes rewriting RFIDs easy. While there are significant malicious uses
of the program, consumers could also use it to protect themselves, he
said.
"Everyone should have the right, once they leave the store, to erase
the RFID tags," he said. Deleting information on the tags would allow
people to stop RFID checkpoints in stores and other places from
tracking which products they are carrying, or which have been inserted under their skin.
Solving the business security issues may not be easy. While encryption
could be used to hide data from unauthorized snoopers, not many RFID
chips can handle the more-involved task of crunching cryptographic
keys. Moreover, the RFID tags that can handle those tasks are among the
most expensive on the market and not something you would stick on a
cream cheese box at the grocery store, Grunwald said.
Store owners could have a database server that they program to track
their goods using the unchangeable serial number on the RFID tag,
however that adds a lot more complexity to the adoption of such
technology, Grunwald added.
"The people who will be using this (shopkeepers) don't know much about technology," he said.