A team of Dutch
researchers has shown that it is possible to install a virus onto an RFID
chip, but security experts told vnunet.com
today that such activities do not pose a serious threat.
The team, which is affiliated to the computer science department at
Vrije
Universiteit in Amsterdam, is to present its findings at the
IEEE's
Pervasive Computing and
Communications Conference in Italy this week.
The
paper (PDF download) is entitled Is Your Cat Infected With a Computer
Virus?.
The team argues that it is possible to insert a virus into the RFID tags,
even though the smallest ones hold very limited amounts of data.
The team tested a virus on a Windows machine running the
Oracle 10g
database alongside a
Philips
RFID reader and used it to infect a mocked-up database system.
Greg Day, security analyst at McAfee, said: "We have a mantra here: 'As it
becomes common so it becomes attacked.'"
"We've seen viruses less than 1,000 bytes in size, so it's possible. But if
you think of the reality of such an attack it's unlikely. And as a virus
propagation method it's useless unless you've already cracked the RFID scanner.
"
The Dutch team postulated a number of attack scenarios, including installing
an infected RFID tag on a supermarket product and using it to access the supply
database, or infecting the ID chip in a cat's ear and taking it to the vet to be
scanned, thus infecting the vet's animal database.
"The spread of RFID malware may launch a new frontier of cat-and-mouse
activity that will play out in the arena of RFID technology," concludes the
paper's authors.
"RFID malware may cause other new phenomena to appear, from RFID phishing
(tricking RFID reader owners into reading malicious RFID tags) to RFID
war-driving (searching for vulnerable RFID readers).
"Each of these cases makes it increasingly obvious that the age of RFID
innocence has been lost."
The authors acknowledged that, in order for the virus to spread, the hacker
would need extensive knowledge of a flaw in a commercial RFID tag reader, but
said that no large piece of software is without such flaws.
"Anything which has the potential for data storage could, in theory, store a
virus's data," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for
Sophos.
"But that does not mean that it would ever successfully spread in the wild or
manage to infect another device.
"I think the typical administrator has got more serious things to worry about
right now than that the price tag on the razor blades they bought that morning
might also carry a theoretical virus."
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