Dr Nicolas Courtois
Dr Nicolas Courtois cracked the cipher used in Oyster cards in April

Oyster cracker vows to clone cards

Cloning kit could sell for just £200, says researcher

Robert Blincoe

The hacker who broke the security of London's Oyster cards plans to clone the cards to prove that it can be done.

Cryptographer Dr Nicolas Courtois estimated that a criminal could create a commercial cloning kit for as little as £200 to produce fake travel cards.

Advertisement

Dr Courtois, a member of the Information Security Group at University College London, was addressing the International Crime Science Conference in London about his exploits.

"I do not know if there will be a lot of cloning, but I think we will be working on a demonstrator to show that it is feasible," he told vnunet.com.

Dr Courtois and his colleagues discovered in April that they could crack MiFare Crypto 1, the cipher used in Oyster cards and a billion RFID chips worldwide.

An attempted injunction to prevent release of the details was rejected by a Dutch court on 22 July.

We are using public source software with a couple of tricks

Dr Nicolas Courtois University College London

Dr Courtois told the conference that a criminal could clone the cards simply by standing behind a user.

"You can do it in public quite fast just from eavesdropping," he said. "It is the very nature of the wireless technology that you can clone the cards in real time."

Dr Courtois's presentation was on whether ethical hackers and researchers should publish details of vulnerabilities they discover.

"We have an interesting dilemma because we cannot survive as researchers without publishing," he said.

"Yet if we do publish the full specification of the cipher and the attack, as soon as the hackers can reproduce what we already do a massive fraud will occur. We can omit some details, but they will sooner or later be discovered by hackers."

Following his address Dr Courtois told vnunet.com: "I hope not to reveal it all, and hope someone else will. I do not want to disclose the spec but the spec is the last straw on which the security is relying."

Using a purely cryptographic approach, the MiFare Crypto 1 cipher was cracked in 12 seconds on a laptop with a 1.66GHz CPU.

"We are using public source software with a couple of tricks. We did not do anything, we just tried our software," he said.

Dr Courtois has also been involved with cracking KeeLoq and Hitag 2, ciphers used by millions of people every day to unlock car doors.

"Cryptology is a science that assesses the security level of a cipher then cracks it," he explained.

"It is the science that gives most of the pain and negative contribution to the industry. We are never able to say 'this is secure', but frequently we can say this is really, really bad."

The International Crime Science Conference was organised by the Centre for Security and Crime Science at UCL.

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Share

Do you agree?

Further reading

Oyster card [© Transport for London 2005]

Researchers crack Oyster card security

There is such a thing as a free ride

Oyster card

Oyster card system fails again

Second free ride for commuters

Court rules Oyster hack can be revealed

Judge sanctions release of full hack details

Oyster card system clams up

Glitch wipes 40,000 cards

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Most watched

V3.co.uk weekly debrief, 13 Nov 09

This week we discuss the inaugural V3.co.uk Summit

Summit: Salesforce.com on SaaS and information overload

How web services contribute to data headaches

Analysis and Reports

Remote access - Three steps to getting connected

3.4 million UK professionals now work from home – is your company equipped?

Cost benefits of a global collaboration network

This white paper is a must read for organisations looking for evidence of the bottom-line benefits of high-definition video and voice communications

Poll

Impact of Information Overload poll

Impact of Information Overload poll

What is the biggest problem your firm faces as a result of the data explosion?

View poll results

Advertisement

White paper library

Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies; IThound.com brings you over 6,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Spotlight

V3.co.uk weekly debrief, 13 Nov 09

This week we discuss the inaugural V3.co.uk Summit

Fingers on keyboard

New Flash vulnerability discovered

Web sites could be vulnerable to Flash attacks

Chris Adams

Summit: Microsoft Office to the rescue

Chris Adams, Office Client product manager for Microsoft UK, explains...

Illegal downloader

Industry and human rights campaigners united in opposition to "three strikes" plan

Critics says government proposals to curb illegal downloading are unworkable...

Primary Navigation