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Rss Directory > Computer > Security > The Register - Security: ID


The Register
Biting the hand that feeds IT
Copyright: Copyright 2008, Situation Publishing
  Mon, 21 Jul 2008 12:38:43 +0200

Airport workers join their bosses

Unions representing airline and airport staff are to tell Home Secretary Jacqui Smith that her plan to force staff to carry ID cards will add nothing to airport security.…

Freedom of speech trumps all

Dutch researchers will be able to publish their controversial report on the Mifare Classic (Oyster) RFID chip in October, a Dutch judge ruled today.…

  Mon, 14 Jul 2008 11:38:34 +0200

Computer fault buggers barriers

Updated London commuters are suffering more problems than usual this morning, thanks to the weekend failure of the Oyster card readers at tube stations and on buses.…

New CRB regs produce a nation of suspects

Analysis If we had suggested, ten years ago, that one day soon, the government would draw up a list of prescribed occupations: that they would build a database of millions of people who would need to register for those occupations; and that a committee of Public Safety would be set up with power of absolute veto over every individual on the database; it is just possible that you would have decided that even El Reg had taken leave of its oh-so-cynical senses.…

Promises 'dramatic reduction' in scam emails

eBay and PayPal have linked up with Gmail to roll out technology designed to block fraudulent emails and phishing attacks.…

  Wed, 09 Jul 2008 13:38:44 +0200

Still embedding passport, address and email though

RFID technology won't feature on every ticket for the forthcoming Beijing Olympics - but those that do have it will contain an embedded chip with the holder's home address, passport details and email address.…

  Tue, 08 Jul 2008 12:59:28 +0200

Report publication 'irresponsible'

Chipmaker NXP, formerly Philips Semiconductors, is taking Dutch Radboud University to court on Thursday to prevent researchers publishing their controversial report on the Mifare Classic chip.…

  Mon, 07 Jul 2008 12:22:37 +0200

Names, addresses, bank accounts and sort codes

Northcliffe Media, owner of the Daily Mail, is the latest company to lose a laptop load of sensitive staff information.…

IANA and ICANN succumb to NetDevilz

The websites of two of the net's most critical oversight organizations were hijacked by Turkish hackers who sent visitors to rogue pages that challenged the overseers' authority.…

  Wed, 25 Jun 2008 18:25:57 +0200

Don’t kill the messenger

The publication of a scientific paper by Radboud University that discusses design flaws of the MIFARE chip in cards such as the Oyster travelcard may be in jeopardy. Dutch secretary of state Tineke Huizinga has urged the university not to publish any secrets that may lead to abuse.…

  Wed, 25 Jun 2008 17:35:28 +0200

Buddy hacker account compromise risk plugged

Yahoo! has fixed a vulnerability that left users of its popular webmail service at risk of having their login credentials stolen.…

  Tue, 24 Jun 2008 08:02:03 +0200

Fakeale redux

Malware authors have created a strain of scareware packages that lifts the name of an infected user from the registry of an infected PC in order to create more convincing scams.…

Post code lottery fix

Credit card conmen have developed a technique for making fraudulent purchases in the UK appear more legitimate.…

  Tue, 10 Jun 2008 11:15:54 +0200

Two gangs blamed for attacks on credulous high-rollers

Targeted phishing attacks against high-rollers reached new heights over the last two months, according to a study by iDefense.…

  Mon, 02 Jun 2008 17:57:49 +0200

IT finally hits the fan months after tapes go AWOL

Couriers lost magnetic tapes containing the personal details of 4.5 million people who had dealt with the Bank of New York Mellon, it has emerged. The incident happened three months ago, but has only surfaced after legal papers were filed in the state of Connecticut.…

  Wed, 28 May 2008 15:32:27 +0200

Soaraway losses

Identity fraud grew alarmingly in the UK last year, with affluent Londoners particularly at risk, according to figures from credit reference agency Experian.…

  Fri, 23 May 2008 20:40:57 +0200

Social spamming

Updated Facebook has fixed a cross site scripting flaw that left its users at risk from scripting attacks.…

Home Office chucks in the cards?

Plans for the widespread introduction of fingerprint passports and ID cards, already delayed until 2012, have receded further into the distance with the publication of the latest Identity & Passport Service cost report for the ID scheme. This effectively pulls the plugs on the network of IPS-run interview centres, and lobs future responsibility for these and for biometric enrolment over to private sector companies.…

Sweet temptation

Women are four times more likely than men to give out "passwords" in exchange for chocolate bars.…

Skyhook, line and sinker

Punters using Wi-Fi based positioning systems on their mobile devices would do well to look before they leap. Security vulnerabilities have discovered location spoofing flaws in the Skyhook positioning system that might be used to lead users astray.…

So who hacked Hansard?

At the end of February Home Office minister Meg Hillier explained the UK ID scheme security system to the Home Affairs Committee. "The National Identity Register, essentially," she said, "will be a secure database; ...hack-proof, not connected to the Internet... not be accessible online; any links with any other agency will be down encrypted links."…

  Tue, 08 Apr 2008 17:44:24 +0200

Who did you text last night?

One in five married UK couples admit to electronic snooping on their spouses, says a report from Oxford University. The report found that many married partners spy on their partner's emails and text messages. One in eight (13 per cent) confessed to checking on internet history files to monitor sites visited by their better halves.…

Brands and Cameron pitch the fix for government's Big ID problem

Early last month Jacqui Smith unveiled the latest revision of the ID card roadmap. On the same day, by happy coincidence, Microsoft bought Credentica's U-Prove assets and hired Dr Stefan Brands. On the one hand, a discredited and failing strategy staggers on under its fourth Home Secretary, while on the other...?…

Customers liable for losses

The banking industry has re-affirmed a policy that makes online banking customers responsible for losses if they have out of date anti-virus or anti-phishing protection. New Banking Codes for consumers and businesses took effect on Monday.…

Pressganged into submission

An Australian high school has stopped fingerprinting its children, on receiving a caning from the country’s press.…

Software that knows if you're mad - or a loner

When the president of a prestigious patent and trademarking firm began receiving emails threatening to bring down its operations unless he paid a $17m ransom, he knew he had to take action. He reported the incident to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, but agents were unable to identify the culprit.…

No fakes detected - terrorists all move to Belgium

Interviews for first time passport applicants have been massively successful - because, er, no fraudulent applications at all have been detected since the government introduced the system last May. In answer to a Freedom of Information request, the Home Office said last week that 38,391 interviews had been held to date, 222 applications were currently under investigation, but that so far no application had been rejected.…

National security now wholly funded by shopping

The government, the British Airports Authority and the Information Commissioner's Office are arguing over fingerprinting at Heathrow's new Terminal 5, which is due to open on Thursday. T5 is to use a 'count them all in, count them all out' biometric system to log entry and exit to the departure lounge, but the ICO thinks the move may breach the Data Protection Act, and has demanded an explanation from BAA.…

Supermarket identity sweep

A New England-based supermarket chain has warned of an information security breach that exposed an estimated 4.2 million credit card records.…

  Wed, 12 Mar 2008 17:29:19 +0100

Lands security lab on Singapore

IBM today snapped up privately-held security software firm Encentuate for an undisclosed sum.…

The keys to London Underground, and plenty more

Security researchers say they've found a way to crack the encryption used to protect a widely-used smartcard in a matter of minutes, making it possible for them to quickly and cheaply clone the cards that are used to secure office buildings and automate the collection of mass transportation fares.…

Smith offers series of compelling propositions

The latest stage in the long slow death of the UK ID scheme became official this morning, as Home Secretary Jacqui Smith unveiled a two-pronged revised delivery plan, aimed first at selected groups of workers and teenagers. This effectively confirms the strategy proposed by the leaked ID scheme Options Analysis earlier this year, and kicks back the widespread issuing of the cards until 2012.…

Smokescreen for a retreat?

Airport workers could be the first to be issued with compulsory ID cards, claimed Tory shadow home secretary David Davis today, citing government documents leaked to his party. Home Secretary Jacqui Smith is due to make a speech on the future of ID cards tomorrow, and Davis suggests that she is likely to announce a postponement until 2012, while making them compulsory for selected groups of victims.…

Will put privacy at risk for no added security

Europe's top privacy watchdog has condemned planned European border controls as weak and based on inconclusive evidence, claiming they will put Europeans' privacy at risk with no guarantee of increased security.…

  Fri, 29 Feb 2008 10:59:16 +0100

Beefs up data responsibility

HM Revenue and Customs has appointed 37 staff to protect information, since it lost personal records on 25 million people last November.…

  Tue, 19 Feb 2008 13:47:18 +0100

Breaking up with Facebook is (less) hard to do

It was a long time coming but the web's favourite has-been-in-the-making, Facebook, has finally agreed to let users who are bored with it wrest their personal information from its advertising salesmens' clutches.…

Sanity check please

Credit checking giant Equifax left Reg reader Thomas flummoxed when it told him to send copies of the front and back of his debit card when he asked for a credit report.…

Slippery slope

A senior US Department of Homeland Security official has floated the idea of requiring citizens to produce federally compliant identification before purchasing some over-the-counter medicines.…

Terminal 1 passengers get to be lab rats

Quietly on Friday, Heathrow Airport recruited quantities of involuntary lab rats to test fingerprint-based security/traffic control system planned for Terminal 5. The luckless pioneers were selected at Terminal 1, where biometrics are now being deducted from any domestic passengers wishing to visit the international lounge.…

All voluntary - for now

Swedish airline SAS is extending a biometric security program on national flights from Stockholm and Gothenburg and will roll it out to international flights in the near future.…

Trust and inclusion foregrounded in desperate rescue plan

Teachers and 16 year olds are the favoured 'soft targets' for the redesigned ID card scheme rollout, according to an Identity & Passport Service planning document seen by The Register. As suggested in leaks last weekend, IPS now plans to soft-pedal fingerprints and - astoundingly - it seems on the point of abandoning the notion of forcing ID cards onto the public via passport renewals.…

  Mon, 28 Jan 2008 08:57:42 +0100

Prints might just be needed for 'special' groups

A key component of the UK ID card scheme, the central database of fingerprints, may be abandoned, according to a leaked Home Office document obtained by the Observer. The document doesn't suggest entirely scrapping fingerprints, but instead suggests that their value should be assessed for each group of the population enrolled.…

Not compulsion - sign here to end the pain...

"Various forms of coercion" could be used to accelerate the rollout of ID cards, the idea being that ID cards will remain 'voluntary' for as long as possible, while not having an ID card will become more and more uncomfortable. This, precisely what the government has intended to do all along, is stated baldly in an Identity & Passport Service leak cited by the Sunday People.…

Halifax customer bites back

The Halifax bank is enrolling unsuspecting customers in trials of a new generation of RFID-enabled bank cards, and trying to keep them in the program even if they have mis-givings about the wave and pay technology.…

Ten years' supply of applicants swiped from car

Personal details of the 600,000 people who have applied to join the armed forces over the last ten years were stolen with an MoD laptop earlier this month, it was admitted late on Friday. The computer was stolen from the car of a junior naval officer, which was parked outside his house overnight in Edgbaston, Birmingham.…

  Sat, 19 Jan 2008 04:55:02 +0100

Password complexity be damned

Yahoo! has pledged to support OpenID from the end of the month, giving a massive boost for the online identity framework that aims to cut password headaches.…

Bad timing for J.C. Penney CEO

Personal information belonging to more than 650,000 US customers of J.C. Penney and other retailers is at risk after the company hired to safeguard the data lost a backup tape.…

  Thu, 17 Jan 2008 17:04:21 +0100

Nine nicked laptops hanging on the wall

A break-in at Middlesbrough Council has resulted in the loss of nine laptops containing sensitive case files on up to 63 vulnerable children.…

  Mon, 14 Jan 2008 23:20:08 +0100

Privacy advocates, security mavens, states' rights renew assault

Critics have renewed their offensive on a federal law mandating changes to state-issued drivers licenses after the US Department of Homeland Security on Friday issued final rules implementing the controversial measure.…

Byrne's 'challenging targets' challenge belief

Immigration minister Liam Byrne has concealed what looks like further ID card slippage and set himself a remarkably unchallenging series of immigration and border control targets in a "ten point plan" for 2008. Humorously described by the Home Office as "challenging", the plan consists largely of low targets, targets already achieved, and harder targets lobbed off into the middle distance.…


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