Get an RFID Shield for your Passport ASAP

A few seconds in a microwave oven will permanently disable any RFID tag.
:confused: wtf why would u want to do that?

yea do that to your passport and you won't be able to use it.... :rolleyes:

The whole idea for the shield is to protect identity theft...
 
I wonder if you put these things around tag sensors at the mall it will "block" out the machines when you walk out of the store :biggrin:

Stephen

haha thats a good point hmm lol pretty soon drivers licenses are going to have RFID's on them too... this technology is just not safe enough to be putting them everywhere.... pretty soon they'll require us to implant them in our wrist...... :mad:
 
haha thats a good point hmm lol pretty soon drivers licenses are going to have RFID's on them too... this technology is just not safe enough to be putting them everywhere.... pretty soon they'll require us to implant them in our wrist...... :mad:

Actually, they already have tracking devices that have been inserted into teeth. Don't ask how I know.:wink:
 
:confused: wtf why would u want to do that?

yea do that to your passport and you won't be able to use it.... :rolleyes:

The whole idea for the shield is to protect identity theft...

You'll still be able to use the passport with no problem. Customs agents follow fallback procedures when a read failure occurs.

"What will happen if my Electronic passport fails at a port-of-entry?

The chip in the passport is just one of the many security features of the new passport. If the chip fails, the passport remains a valid travel document until its expiration date. The bearer will continue to processed by the port-of-entry officer as if he/she had a passport without a chip. "


http://travel.state.gov/passport/eppt/eppt_2788.html#Fourteen

FYI gentlemen.
 
Want to buy a foil hat....To go with your passport protector

:rolleyes: seriously? yea that's a great attitude... you know an RFID chip can be cloned without them being anywhere near you? I guess you don't mind it if someone uses your passport.... :rolleyes: or access card to the office....

Actually, they already have tracking devices that have been inserted into teeth. Don't ask how I know.:wink:

yes i know they do - its just not federally mandated....... yet.
 
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Good stuff. Thanks enkrypt3d.
It's amazing how insecure everything is. I'm researching iPhone security right now. Those things are a joke.
 
Good stuff. Thanks enkrypt3d.
It's amazing how insecure everything is. I'm researching iPhone security right now. Those things are a joke.

Any choice links you'd like to share? I'm interested in reading about it.
 
Any choice links you'd like to share? I'm interested in reading about it.

Copy and paste my current notes. I haven't submitted it, research is still in progress. I think my final reco is going to be to open up the policy to allow iphones but only if they're running a 3rd party app to control encryption.


--------------------------Notes-------------------------------------

Current flaws in Apple iPhone security:

- Bypass password and encryption with forensics and/or hacking tools.
This works with all iPhones as of Feb 2010.

From the wired article below:
“Zdziarski said it’s just as easy to access a user’s private information on an iPhone 3GS as it was on the previous generation iPhone 3G or first generation iPhone, both of which didn’t feature encryption. If a thief got his hands on an iPhone, a little bit of free software is all that’s needed to tap into all of the user’s content. Live data can be extracted in as little as two minutes, and an entire raw disk image can be made in about 45 minutes,…”
““If they’re relying on Apple’s security, then their application is going to be terribly insecure,” he said. “Apple may be technically correct that [the iPhone 3GS] has an encryption piece in it, but it’s entirely useless toward security.”
He added that the ability for the iPhone to self-erase itself remotely using Apple’s MobileMe service isn’t very helpful, either: Any reasonably intelligent criminal would remove the SIM card to prevent the remote-wipe command from coming through.”
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2009/07/iphone-encryption/

Walk-through on how to do it(what is now an hour process will eventually turn into a GUI click-button app for kids):
http://tungchingkai.blogspot.com/2009/04/how-to-decrypt-iphone-os-30-beta.html

I also have a 1 hour walk-through video if anyone would like to watch. It’s interesting.



Olders flaws in Apple iPhone security:
What this shows is apples track record for security. It also shows that without a 3rd party app for security, we’re going to have to upgrade iPhones with security patches unlike with blackberrys.

- Bypass password and encryption simply by turning device off and on while device is changing from 3G to Edge network.
Works with iPhone 2.2, not with 3.x.
http://www.glandell.com/iphone/bypass-passcode-os-2.2.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NWORUthyZU

- Bypass password and encryption by clicking to make an emergency call and taping home button.
What makes this more of an concern is that apple patched it, and then re-broke it.
http://blogs.zdnet.com/security/?p=1809



3rd Party Solutions:
IMO, the only way to roll out iPhones given all of our compliance requirements is to use a 3rd part app to handle encryption, remote wipe, password policies, etc.
There are currently 3 software vendors making 3rd party apps to bring iPhones up to blackberrys level of security.
Tangoe, Sybase, and Good.
I’m currently evaluating Good. The server is $1,500 which includes 5 user licenses.

--------------------------Notes-------------------------------------
 
iphone security is pretty poor, and I'm a fan of the product. A did some consulting for a firm and while working there I was given a black berry to use because the firm didn't trust some of the sensitive financial data to an iphone. Yikes.
 
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