Study: RFID Tags Carry Potential Virus Threat

By Ed Oswald | Published March 15, 2006, 4:38 PM

Radio chips being marketed as a replacement for the barcode threaten consumer privacy and are able to carry a virus, Dutch university scientists revealed on Wednesday. An infected radio frequency identity (RFID) tag is able to disrupt the database that reads information on the chip.

Scientists at Amsterdam's Free University were able to create a chip infected with a virus, and then use it to infect the database. Before this study, supporters of RFID assumed that the technology could not modify the back-end software that reads it.

"In our research, we have discovered that if certain vulnerabilities exist in the RFID software, an RFID tag can be (intentionally) infected with a virus and this virus can infect the backend database used by the RFID software," the researchers wrote in a paper discussing the flaw.

"From there it can be easily spread to other RFID tags."

The group says their experience in warning those using the technology about its security issues shows that many are dismissing such a notion as academic and theoretical. Thus, the group is making the malware code publicly available in order to convince users that the problem is potentially serious.

Several scenarios were given on how an RFID virus could be very dangerous, such as a prankster uploading a virus to a supermarket computer that could be used to change prices, or using his cat to pass a computer virus from animal to computer and back to animal through another RFID tag.

However, what may be the scariest of all is the potential airline scenario, where a virus could be used to disrupt baggage-handling systems, potentially hiding suspicious cargo.

"Merely infecting other tags is the most benign case," the group wrote. "An RFID virus could also carry a payload that did other damage to the database, for example, helping drug smugglers or terrorists hide their baggage from airline and government officials."

While in most cases, the critical response to RFID has been due to privacy issues, the scientists' discovery of potentially malicious ways to use the technology is even more troubling, they say.

In turn, the group is advocating action be taken now. "It is a lot better to lock the barn door while the prize race horse is still inside than to deal with the consequences of not doing so afterwards," they said.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

A logical defence would seem to be to encapsulate RFID tag data and buffer/screen it before sending it for downstream processing.

Other potential threat scenarios involving RFIDS: a competitor can walk around rival's store gathering data on available merchandise. Even without a complete and accurate inventory, trends over time could be of critiacal marketing value.

As RFID tags drop in price, simply distributing them around a competitor's store could skew the inventory processing.

I'm not an expert on RFID technology and I don't know if the protocols already protect against such attacks. I would hope so.

Dev

Score: 0

|

I luv it!! And i think it already has spread to some folks' brains...

Score: 0

|

The paper is basically talking about SQL injection, buffer overflows and SSI exploits. While the application would have to be written pretty poorly to actually perform one of these, there are a lot of poorly written applications out there. You can read the paper here:
http://www.rfidvirus.org/papers/percom.06.pdf

Score: 0

|

That's what I thought so. There is no assumption in software because it would only make an ASS-U-ME. Moreover security is a consideration in any technolgy and should be considered in the planning.

Score: 0

|

Hopefully it will at least make programmers more aware of the threats. I remember learning about SQL injections way back when. It was so simple and obvious, I just never though about it until someone showed me.

Score: 0

|

After telling US to mind its own business, Kroes slaps caps on Rambus royalties

The holder of many patents worldwide pertaining to DDR memory offered to reduce its royalty stake in that technology, and today the EU said yes.

Why Apple succeeds, and always will

The company consistently plays by different rules, literally like David did in his battle against Goliath.

EC's Kroes to US senators: Mind your own business on Oracle + Sun

UPDATED The EU's antitrust chief told the United States Senate Tuesday that any merger that takes place in the world is more her affair than theirs.

Betanews Podcast: Rupert Murdoch and the buying stuff online problem

We'll have a more difficult time paying for online news if the underlying protocol for online payment has a big gaping hole in it.

In a peace offering to newspapers, Google offers a new news format

It's probably not a solution to the woes of major news publishers, but Living Stories may gather a few of those publishers together in search of one.

Google Maps doesn't prevent car accidents, only search accidents

This week, Google updated Maps for Android 3.3.1, adding topography, nearby points of interest, and error reporting.

DOJ: Microsoft interop docs are now 'substantially complete'

A major milestone in the US Government's oversight of Microsoft is passed, as the Justice Dept. is now saying the company's protocol documents make sense.

The $1 DVD rental debate: LA group says Redbox will lose movie makers $1B

A report from the Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation says cheap Redbox DVD rentals could seriously damage the movie business.

First impressions of Droid: Easy, breezy, friendly, if a little fat

Though it's not quite as well-polished as Apple's iPhone OS, the version of Android that Motorola's Droid phone sports is still a breeze to use.

Windows fix for TLS security bug still forthcoming, won't be Tuesday

Anyone looking for a fix for last month's discovery of a potentially serious security hole in TLS and SSL may have to wait until everyone is ready to act together.

Not the first, not the last, technology predictions for 2010

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: The real truth is probably that what went around in 2009, will come around to haunt us next year.