To: ~digs  who wrote (324 ) 10/29/2001 9:01:15 PM From: ~digs     Respond to    of 343  Pentagon Unveils 'Smart' ID Cards                    By D. Ian Hopper                   AP Technology Writer                   Monday, Oct. 29, 2001; 5:37 p.m. EST                    WASHINGTON –– The nation's increasingly high-tech soldiers are                   getting another computer in their arsenal – this one wallet-sized.                    The Pentagon began arming four million troops and civilians on Monday                   with "smart" ID cards that will allow them to open secure doors, get cash,                   buy food – and soon check out weapons and other military hardware.                    The cards, about the size of a credit card, will replace the standard green                   ID cards now used by Defense employees.                    They include a bar code, circuit chip and magnetic stripe to store personal                   information about its holder. With it, soldiers can access secure Defense                   Web sites, log into their computers and digitally encrypt and sign their                   e-mail.                    "It is their passport to the electronic world," Defense personnel chief                   David S.C. Chu said after receiving his card.                    Through the Internet at more than 900 issuance sites worldwide, a soldier                   gets his digital picture taken and his fingerprint stored and picks a personal                   identification number. In about 10 to 15 minutes, he gets his card.                    John P. Stenbit, the Pentagon's chief information officer, said the card will                   help solve the "hurry up and wait" syndrome in the military, where                   paperwork can bog down processes.                    If a card is lost, officials said its digital signatures will be deactivated once                   it is reported, and the employee will get a new card. The government has                   had a tough time tracking credit cards, The Associated Press reported in                   August, with at least 15 agencies reporting that they have more issued                   cards than employees. The smart cards cost the government about $8                   each.                    The cards also offer an added security benefit, he said, in an attack similar                   to the Pentagon crash.                    "It's not just 'Gee, that's really neat,'" Stenbit said, "but if you have an                   incident, you can tell who's gotten out of the building and who's still stuck                   in there."                    At a computer terminal, soldiers will swipe the card and type in their                   numerical password. The password provides an extra level of security.                    "There is something she has and something she knows," said Rob Cobb, a                   software developer at military contractor Electronic Data Systems. "It's an                   important separation."                    Within months, a soldier will be able to swipe his card to check out a                   weapon or ammunition, and the card can store his sharpshooting score.                    There are about 3 billion smart cards worldwide, according to industry                   analyst Frost & Sullivan, but the vast majority are tiny cards used to                   activate cellular phones on the network most common to Europe. Smart                   cards are also used extensively in South Africa and Argentina.                    Credit-card sized smart cards have taken longer to catch on in the United                   States. Some large companies, like Sun Microsystems, use them for                   employee identification. Perhaps the best-known smart card is the "Blue"                   credit card by American Express.                    "We don't seem to have adopted as quickly to this technology, and I'm                   glad to see us moving forward," Stenbit said.                    The slow pace is partly due to privacy concerns. A plan for a national                   identification card, proposed by Oracle chairman Larry Ellison and briefly                   considered by Attorney General John Ashcroft and Democratic Sen.                   Dianne Feinstein of California, fizzled several weeks ago after privacy                   groups raised concerns the cards would allow the government to monitor                   citizens' activities.                    The military is also worried about packing too much information into the                   card.                    There is little encoded on the smart chip – like a fingerprint – that isn't                   visible on the card's face. There's only so much that can be packed into                   the chip's tiny memory, as well.                    "There's a very limited amount of intrusion into anyone's privacy," Stenbit                   said.                    While officials are considering whether encode medical data onto it, they                   said that step is very far off.                    "That's a more complex subject," Chu said.                    –––----                   On the Net: Defense Department: defenselink.mil                     Electronic Data Systems: eds.com                     Schlumberger Sema: slb.com  © Copyright 2001 The Associated Press  washingtonpost.com