Jeans made made by betabrand Norton to prevent data pickpocketing'
The jeans have pockets that block RFID signals
A pair of jeans containing material
that blocks wireless signals is being developed in conjunction with anti-virus
firm Norton.
The trousers are intended to stop
thieves hacking into radio
frequency identification (RFID) tagged passports or contactless payment cards.
frequency identification (RFID) tagged passports or contactless payment cards.
According to security experts this
type of theft is a growing problem.
The jeans are designed by online
clothing company Betabrand and use a silver-based material to block signals.
They are due to go on sale in
February.
Security software maker Norton
teamed up with San Francisco-based Betabrand in October to make the jeans and a
blazer. The jeans will retail at $151 (£96) and the blazer at $198.
The majority of credit and debit cards are fitted with Near
Field Communication chips, a type of RFID tech
Digital forensic firm Disklabs has
used similar technology to make a wallet, which, like the Betabrand jeans,
blocks RFID signals.
"There is technology readily
available for anyone to snatch other people's credit and debit card data within
seconds," said Disklabs boss Simon Steggles.
"These apps simply copy the
card with all the information on it."
His firm also designs
"faraday" bags which block mobile signals. Such bags are often used
by police now to store mobile phones taken from suspects.
Last month the BBC reported that
several police forces around the country had admitted that some mobile phones
confiscated from suspects had been remotely wiped because they had not been
stored in a secure way.
Wearable hacks
Disklab's RFID-blocking wallet will go on sale in the new
year
Ethical hacker Ken Munro is also
acutely aware of the problem of RFID hacking. His firm, Pen Test Partners, has
developed him a proof-of-concept RFID-blocking suit.
Made of cloth woven with metal
fibres, the suit was not cheap to make but is washable.
"If we are not explicitly
blocking these signals there are a lot of things that can go wrong, from
stealing contactless payment card details to more life-threatening
issues," he told the BBC.
He thinks the RFID jeans may not be
a sufficient defence against hackers.
"The pockets are shielded but
nothing else. Stuff in your pockets is easy to shield with a wallet or similar.
Our suit is different - the entire thing is shielded."
This becomes important as more and
more RFID technology, such as wearable insulin pumps or in-chest monitoring
devices, becomes standard, he said.
"These are the devices where
tampering or hacking over radio frequency could be life-threatening," he
said.
"I'm not sure that medical device
manufacturers have given enough thought to security
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