E-Passport Hacker Designs RFID Security Tool

Hit News   January 21st, 2009 18:02  

The team that produced the RFDump research/ for cloning and altering data stored on has now come out with a product to thwart .

researcher Lukas Grunwald, who made headlines two years ago for uncovering security vulnerabilities in new electronic passports being adopted by the U.S. and other countries, created RFDump with colleague in 2004.

Now the two have created RF-Wall (shown on the lower shelf in the picture at right) to help thwart fraud and attacks against e-passports, electronic access cards and payment cards — such as the card that is used in the London Underground and which security researchers recently cracked.

The device, which Grunwald and Wolf are producing for their new California-based company , is a hybrid firewall and intrusion-detection system that sits between an reader and its back-end system. It’s designed to detect counterfeit and cloned chips and prevent an attacker from injecting malware into a back-end system with a rogue chip. They’ll be debuting the device this week at the Journal Live conference in Las Vegas but gave me a demonstration of it this weekend.

Hacker Designs RFID Security Tool

Hacker Designs Security Tool

Rfwall_5 The box can be loaded with virus signatures to detect known types of attacks and uses heuristics to detect other malicious activity, such as generic attacks (such as the one that appears in the screenshot above right). The device can be restricted to read only cards that have specific serial numbers and reject all others. It also can be used to digitally sign chips so that any chips that are altered after being issued are rejected by the reader. The system uses the HMAC algorithm for the digital signature. Grunwald and Wolf hold a patent on the use of HMAC with technology.

Last year Grunwald revealed that he’d been able to sabotage the e-passport readers of two unnamed manufacturers by embedding a buffer overrun exploit in the JPEG2000 file of a cloned passport chip. The JPEG file contains a digital photo of the passport holder.

Recently other researchers cracked the encryption used in chips that are used in door access systems around the world as well as in the London Underground’s Oyster card.

It’s long been known that readers and chips are insecure, but trying to fix systems that have already been widely deployed has its challenges, particularly since there are a number of different types of chips and readers on the market, which work at different frequencies.

“A lot of people are thinking about on-tag security — putting cryptography on the tag,” Wolf says. “But those tags are limited in their computational power or even if you can get that worked out the more encryption technology you have on the tag, the more expensive it is. We’re saying you don’t have to worry about what’s happening with your tag if you can verify whether there’s data integrity or not.”

Grunwald says they’ve shown the tool to a large pharmaceutical company based in Switzerland that is interested in using it to authenticate drugs and equipment — such as dialysis machines — from counterfeit products. He says an Asian country is also interested in using RF-Wall with its electronic passport system.

During a demonstration for me, Grunwald and Wolf used RFDump to alter the value on a digitally signed transportation card from $10 to $99. On a first pass without RF-Wall in place, the RFID reader accepted the card. After they connected the device, however, the system rejected the tag. The system also rejected a tag that was embedded with SQL injection code.

The screenshot at right shows the backend of an RFID inventory system after malware on a rogue chip has crashed it.

Source and More : http://blog.wired.com

Via  : computerworld.com cracked the encryption used in Mifare Classic chips

Leave a Reply

Search

Tag Cloud

Pages

Archives

Blogroll