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U.S.
passports adding microchip of your personal identity
By Amy Klein
The Record
HACKENSACK,
N.J. (KRT) - The little blue book that opens doors around the world
is about to get a big technological face-lift.
Beginning next
year, new U.S. passports will contain a computer chip embedded in
the back cover that will store all of the document’s printed
biographic information plus a digital photograph that authorities
say is harder to alter.
The microchip,
which won’t be noticeable, can be waved in front of a reader
without contact -similar to the E-ZPass toll-road system - and will
contain enough room to ultimately hold multiple photos or other
identifying marks, said Kelly Shannon, spokeswoman for the Bureau
of Consular Affairs.
The switch
to a computer chip aims to address security concerns raised in the
wake of Sept. 11, 2001, Shannon said. Although travelers will not
be required to replace existing passports, any renewed or new passports
issued by mid-2005 will contain the microchip.
The same applies
to foreign travelers entering the United States: After September
2005, new passports issued to residents of non-visa countries, such
as France or Spain, must contain a chip.
“With
the old passport, someone could physically cut into the passport
photo,” Shannon said. “It’s going to make it much
more difficult to tamper with. What we’re really looking to
do is verify more thoroughly who is traveling.”
As with any
technological innovation, the new passports will only be as good
as those who monitor them, said Daniel Solove, a professor at George
Washington University Law School and author of “The Digital
Person: Technology and Privacy in the Information Age.”
Whether a thief
can use someone else’s chip will depend on how many points
of identification screeners will require at points of entry and
departure, Solove said.
Moreover, if
a document that stores a fingerprint or retina scan is lost or stolen,
the identifying mark can be replaced, but Solove said the process
will take time.
The changes
have been met with resistance from civil rights advocates and legal
experts who say the technology brings the country one step closer
to a Big Brother future.
Although federal
officials stress that the chip will contain the same information
currently printed on a passport, members of the American Civil Liberties
Union say they are primarily worried about the non-contact nature
of the chip, which raises the possibility that the contents could
be read surreptitiously.
“They
send out a little radio signal with data on it, which means that
anybody with a reader who comes into range of your passport can
get all the data off your passport,” said Jay Stanley, spokesman
for the ACLU’s Technology and Liberty Project, which has met
with the head of consular affairs. “Theoretically, an FBI
agent could walk into a mosque and suck up the identities of anyone
in there.”
Although the
chip can be read only as far away as 10 centimeters, Stanley said
it wouldn’t take long for black market technology to catch
up and for someone to design rogue readers that could pick up information
from farther away.
The technology
used to create the microchip stems from the rapidly growing field
of biometrics, a form of identifying people using physical characteristics,
such as a fingerprint or an iris scan.
Several states,
including Virginia, are considering using biometrics on driver’s
licenses. Two years ago, officials at the Super Bowl in San Diego
wanted to use facial recognition security cameras to scan the stadium,
but the idea was ditched after the technology proved too inaccurate
to pick a criminal from a crowd.
In New Jersey,
legislators are drafting a law that aims to restrict unauthorized
use of biometrics. Under the bill, which is expected to emerge from
a Senate subcommittee in January, law enforcement would need court
approval - similar to a search warrant - to access a person’s
biometrics. Commercial use would be limited to prevent identity
theft.
“If you’re
at a ballgame or walking through an airport or railroad station,
then yes, those are public places and your biometrics can be picked
up by a camera,” said New Jersey Assemblywoman Joan Quigley,
D-Hudson, who sponsored the bill. “But we want to make sure
those tapes can’t be sold in any way.”
Quigley favors
a federal law regulating the use of biometrics and hopes the New
Jersey legislation will serve as a prototype.
A government
that collects biometric information on its citizens needs to have
a legal or regulatory agency in place to protect against profiling,
Solove said.
The microchip
in the U.S. passport is intended only to hold written information
and a photo with facial recognition technology. But the 64-kilobyte
chip has plenty of extra memory, said Shannon of the consular affairs
bureau.
“Look,
we understand there are privacy issues. This information is going
to be protected,” Shannon said. “It never hurts to take
the next step.”
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