Patent Publication Number: US-11039293-B2

Title: Method and devices for transmitting a secured data package to a communication device

Description:
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     The present application is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/693,656, filed Sep. 1, 2017, which claims benefit of Switzerland Patent Application No. 01149/16, filed Sep. 6, 2016, the disclosures of which are each incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. 
    
    
     FIELD OF THE TECHNOLOGY 
     The present disclosure relates to a method and devices for transmitting a secured data package from a computer system to a short-range communication device. Specifically, the present disclosure relates to a mobile communication apparatus, a short-range communication device, and a method of transmitting a secured data package from a computer system to the short-range communication device. 
     BACKGROUND 
     For many years, electronic terminal devices have been installed and used in access control systems in connection with passive RFID transponders (Radio Frequency Identifier). The electronic terminal devices were configured as short-range communication devices and included RFID readers for reading in a wireless fashion access rights or at least user identifiers from RFID transponders to control access to an access controlled area, such as a building or a room, or to access controlled objects, such as a car or goods in a vending machine, etc. With the arrival of mobile radio phones (cellular phones, smart phones) that included active RFID-based communication interfaces, so called NFC interfaces (Near Field Communication), it became possible to use such mobile communication apparatuses as carriers of access rights rather than passive RFID transponders in form of RFID cards, dongles, or the like. Both operators and users of access control systems welcomed the provision of mobile communication apparatuses with radio-based communication modules for establishing local or direct wireless communication links with short-range communication devices, because it was no longer necessary to use special purpose RFID transponders in form of RFID cards, dongles, or the like. Furthermore, the mobile communication apparatuses included other communication interfaces for short-range communication, such as Bluetooth (BT) or Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), which lead to the short-range communication devices being additionally equipped with such further communication interfaces to improve flexibility and versatility. Nevertheless, while the use of mobile communication apparatuses and improved flexibility and versatility of short-range communication devices further increased the number of applications and installations of short-range communication devices, the secure management and control of access rights and credentials for the short-range communication devices remained a challenge and, typically, required laborious and costly wiring of the terminals to back-end systems. Moreover, so called stand-alone or off-line terminals without communication links to back-end systems are difficult to maintain and keep up to date with the frequent software upgrades and hardware innovations of mobile phones, in particular, and the short product life cycles customary in the world of consumer electronic products, in general. 
     SUMMARY 
     This disclosure provides a method and devices for transmitting a secured data package from a computer system to a short-range communication device, which method and devices do not have at least some of the disadvantages of the prior art. 
     Aspects of the present disclosure are described through the features of the independent claims. In addition, further aspects follow from the dependent claims and the description. 
     A mobile communication apparatus comprises a first circuit configured for data communication via a mobile radio network, a second circuit configured for short-range communication with a short-range communication device, and a third circuit configured to determine apparatus location information, indicative of a current location of the mobile communication apparatus. 
     According to the present disclosure, the mobile communication apparatus further comprises a processor connected to the first, second, and third circuits, and configured to receive via the mobile radio network a secured data package from a computer system, to receive device location information from the short-range communication device, to determine access authorization based on verifying correspondence of the device location information and the apparatus location information, determining affirmative access authorization in case of correspondence of the device location information and the apparatus location information, and determining negative access authorization in lack of correspondence of the device location information and the apparatus location information, and to transfer the secured data package to the short-range communication device, in case of affirmative access authorization, and to not transfer the secured data package to the short-range communication device, in case of negative access authorization. Using a mobile communication apparatus as a communication intermediary makes it possible to transfer a secured data package from a computer system to short-range communication device, which has no direct connectivity to the computer system. The secured data package can be transferred to the short-range communication device in on-line mode, when the mobile communication apparatus has connectivity to the computer system, and in off-line mode, when the mobile communication has no connectivity to the computer system. By verifying in the mobile communication apparatus correspondence of the location of the mobile communication apparatus with location information of the short-range communication device, the transfer of the secured data package (or of any other confidential or critical data for that matter) from the mobile communication apparatus to the short-range communication device can be prevented in compromised scenarios where the (unwired) short-range communication device has been fraudulently moved to another location or mistakenly installed in a location that does not correspond to the device location stored in the short-range communication device. Moreover, the secured data package (including cryptographic keys, configuration data or any other confidential or critical data) can be distributed to short-range communication devices via a multitude of different communication technologies, e.g. RFID, NFC, WLAN, BT, BLE, etc. 
     In an embodiment, the device location information is received from the short-range communication device included in a data read request, and the processor is configured to reject the read request, in case of negative access authorization. 
     In an embodiment, the secured data package is received with target location information, and the processor is configured to determine the access authorization further based on verifying correspondence of the device location information and the target location information, determining affirmative access authorization in case of correspondence of the device location information and the target location information, and determining negative access authorization in lack of correspondence of the device location information and the target location information. 
     In a further embodiment, the processor is configured to further receive device time information from the short-range communication device, e.g. included in the data read request, and to determine the access authorization further based on verifying correspondence of the device time information and time information stored in the mobile communication apparatus, determining affirmative access authorization in case of correspondence of the device time information and time information stored in the mobile communication apparatus, and determining negative access authorization in lack of correspondence of the device time information and time information stored in the mobile communication apparatus. 
     In an embodiment, the secured data package includes one or more secret access keys, one or more access rights, configuration data for the short-range communication device, and/or time information, and the processor is configured to transfer the secured data package including the one or more secret access keys, the one or more access rights, the configuration data, and/or time information, respectively, to the short-range communication device, in case of affirmative access authorization, and to not transfer the secured data package to the short-range communication device, in case of negative access authorization. 
     In an embodiment, the processor is configured to execute authentication and access control protocols, which govern authentication and access control between the mobile communication apparatus and the short-range communication device, for accessing the short-range communication device to set the device location information in the short-range communication device, and, in case of affirmative authentication and access control, to use the apparatus location information to set the device location information in the short-range communication device. 
     In a further embodiment, the processor is configured to execute authentication and access control protocols, which govern authentication and access control between the mobile communication apparatus and the short-range communication device, for accessing the mobile communication apparatus, using one or more secret access keys and/or access rights, to perform at least one of: reading data from a secured data store of the mobile communication apparatus, writing data into the secured data store, and interacting with a secured application of the mobile communication apparatus. 
     In addition to the mobile communication apparatus, the present disclosure also relates to a short-range communication device, which comprises a circuit configured for short-range communication with a mobile communication apparatus and a processor connected to the circuit. The processor is configured to receive from the mobile communication apparatus a data package. The data package includes apparatus location information, indicative of a current location of the mobile communication apparatus. The processor is further configured to determine access authorization based on verifying correspondence of device location information stored in the short-range communication device and the apparatus location information received from the mobile communication apparatus, determining affirmative access authorization in case of correspondence of the device location information and the apparatus location information, and determining negative access authorization in lack of correspondence of the device location information and the apparatus location information. The processor is further configured to determine and store in the short-range communication device a content of the data package received from the mobile communication apparatus, in case of affirmative access authorization, and to reject the data package, in case of negative access authorization. By verifying in the short-range communication device correspondence of the location of the mobile communication apparatus with location information of the short-range communication device, the acceptance of the data package from the mobile communication apparatus can be prevented in compromised scenarios where the mobile communication apparatus is located in another location than specified and stored in the short-range communication device, e.g. because of a remote, extended interface attack, or because of an installation of the short-range communication device in an erroneous location. 
     In an embodiment, the processor is configured to receive from the mobile communication apparatus time information, and to determine the access authorization further based on verifying correspondence of device time information stored in the short-range communication device and the time information received from the mobile communication apparatus, determining affirmative access authorization in case of correspondence of the device time information and the time information received from the mobile communication apparatus, and determining negative access authorization in lack of correspondence of the device time information and the time information received from the mobile communication apparatus. 
     In a further embodiment, the processor is configured to extract from the secured data package one or more secret access keys, one or more access rights, configuration data for the short-range communication device, and/or time information; and to store in a secured data store of the short-range communication device the one or more secret access keys, the one or more access rights, the configuration data, and/or the time information, respectively. 
     In an embodiment, the processor is configured to execute authentication and access control protocols, which govern authentication and access control between the short-range communication device and the mobile communication apparatus, for accessing the short-range communication device to set the device location information in the short-range communication device, and, in case of affirmative authentication and access control, to receive from the mobile communication apparatus the apparatus location information, and to set the device location information in the short-range communication device using the apparatus location information. 
     In a further embodiment, the processor is configured to execute authentication and access control protocols, which govern authentication and access control between the short-range communication device and the mobile communication apparatus, for accessing the mobile communication apparatus, using one or more secret access keys and/or access rights, to perform reading data from a secured data store of the mobile communication apparatus, writing data into the secured data store, and/or interacting with a secured application of the mobile communication apparatus. 
     In addition to the mobile communication apparatus and the short-range communication device, the present disclosure also relates to a method of transmitting a secured data package from a computer system to a short-range communication device. The method comprises: transmitting the secured data package from the computer system via a mobile radio network to a mobile communication apparatus; placing the mobile communication apparatus in a communication range of the short-range communication device; determining an access authorization based on verifying correspondence of apparatus location information, indicative of a current location of the mobile communication apparatus, and device location information stored in the short-range communication device, determining affirmative access authorization in case of correspondence of the apparatus location information and the device location information, and determining negative access authorization in lack of correspondence of the apparatus location information and the device location information; and, in case of affirmative access authorization, transferring the secured data package to the short-range communication device and determining and storing in the short-range communication device a content of the data package received from the mobile communication apparatus. 
     In an embodiment, the method further comprises: receiving in the mobile communication apparatus a data read request from the short-range communication device, the data read request including the device location information; determining in the mobile communication apparatus the apparatus location information; determining in the mobile communication apparatus a first authorization of access based on the device location information received from the short-range communication device and the apparatus location information; and transferring the secured data package from the mobile communication apparatus to the short-range communication device, in case of affirmative first authorization of access, or rejecting the read request, in case of negative first authorization of access. 
     In a further embodiment, the method further comprises: receiving in the short-range communication device the apparatus location information from the mobile communication apparatus; determining in the short-range communication device a second authorization of access based on the device location information stored in the short-range communication device and the apparatus location information received from the mobile communication apparatus; and determining and storing in the short-range communication device the content of the secured data package received from the mobile communication apparatus, in case of affirmative second authorization of access, or rejecting the data package, in case of negative second authorization of access. 
     The present disclosure also relates to a method of transmitting a secured data package from a computer system to a short-range communication device, whereby the method comprises: transmitting the secured data package from the computer system via a mobile radio network to a mobile communication apparatus; placing the mobile communication apparatus in a communication range of the short-range communication device; receiving in the mobile communication apparatus device location information from the short-range communication device, e.g. included in a data read request from the short-range communication device; determining in the mobile communication apparatus apparatus location information indicative of a current location of the mobile communication apparatus; determining in the mobile communication apparatus a first authorization of access based on the device location information received from the short-range communication device and the apparatus location information, determining affirmative first authorization of access in case of correspondence of the apparatus location information and the device location information, and determining negative first authorization of access in lack of correspondence of the apparatus location information and the device location information; transferring the secured data package from the mobile communication apparatus to the short-range communication device, in case of affirmative first authorization of access, or rejecting the read request, in case of negative first authorization of access; receiving in the short-range communication device the apparatus location information from the mobile communication apparatus; determining in the short-range communication device a second authorization of access based on the device location information stored in the short-range communication device and the apparatus location information received from the mobile communication apparatus, determining affirmative second authorization of access in case of correspondence of the apparatus location information and the device location information, and determining negative second authorization of access in lack of correspondence of the apparatus location information and the device location information; and determining and storing in the short-range communication device the content of the secured data package received from the mobile communication apparatus, in case of affirmative second authorization of access, or rejecting the data package, in case of negative second authorization of access. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       The present disclosure will be explained in more detail, by way of example, with reference to the drawings in which: 
         FIG. 1  shows a block diagram illustrating schematically a mobile communication apparatus configured to transfer a secured data package from a computer system to a short-range communication device. 
         FIG. 2  shows a flow diagram illustrating an exemplary sequence of steps for transmitting a secured data package from a computer system to a short-range communication device. 
         FIG. 3  shows a flow diagram illustrating an exemplary sequence of steps for a mobile communication apparatus setting location information in a short-range communication device. 
         FIG. 4  shows a flow diagram illustrating an exemplary sequence of steps for controlled access of a short-range communication device to a mobile communication apparatus. 
         FIG. 5  shows a flow diagram illustrating an exemplary sequence of steps for verifying in a short-range communication device access authorization of a mobile communication apparatus based on location information received from the mobile communication apparatus. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     In  FIGS. 1-5 , reference numeral  1  refers to a mobile communication apparatus which is implemented as mobile radio telephone (smart phone, smart watch) or a mobile computer such as a tablet computer, a PDA (personal data assistant) or a portable personal computer. 
     As illustrated in  FIG. 1 , the mobile communication apparatus  1  comprises a circuit configured for mobile radio network communication  11 , a circuit configured for short-range communication  13  with a short-range communication device  2 , and a circuit configured to determine apparatus location information  12  indicative of the current location of the mobile communication apparatus  1 . One skilled in the art will understand that two or more of these circuits can be implemented as one common circuit or they can be implemented as separate circuits. 
     The short-range communication circuit  13  is configured for short-range bidirectional data communication with a short-range communication device  2 . The short-range communication circuit  13  comprises an RFID transceiver (Radio Frequency Identifier), an NFC transceiver (Near Field Communication), a BLE transceiver (Bluetooth Low Energy), and/or a WLAN (Wi-Fi) transceiver. For example, the short-range communication circuit  13  is configured to interact with a contactless device according to a standardized RFID protocol as defined in standards such as ISO 18092, ISO 15693, or ISO 14443, or according to a proprietary data transmission or RFID protocol. For example, the short-range communication circuit  13  is configured to operate at a carrier frequency in the range of 100 KHz to 2.5 GHz; particularly, the carrier frequency is set to the working frequency of an RFID system, e.g. 6.78 MHz, 13.56 MHz, or 27.12 MHz (or another multiple of 13.56 MHz). 
     The mobile radio network communication circuit  11  is configured for data communication with a remote computer system  4  via a mobile radio network  3 . The mobile radio network communication circuit  11  is configured for BT (Bluetooth), BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy), WLAN (Wireless Local Area Network), GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications), UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) and/or other mobile radio data communication services. Accordingly, the mobile radio network  3  comprises a WLAN, a GSM network, an UMTS network, another mobile radio data communication network, and/or the Internet. 
     The apparatus location determination circuit  12  is configured to determine the current location of the mobile communication apparatus  1 . The apparatus location determination circuit  12  comprises a receiver for satellite-based navigation, e.g. a GPS receiver (Global Positioning System). Alternatively or in addition, the apparatus location determination circuit  12  is configured to determine the location of the mobile communication apparatus  1  using network data from the mobile radio network  3 . 
     As illustrated in  FIG. 1 , the mobile communication apparatus  1  further comprises a processor  14 , a secured data store  15 , and a display  16 . The processor  14  is connected to the mobile radio network communication circuit  11 , the apparatus location determination circuit  12 , the short-range communication circuit  13 , the secured data store  15 , and the display  16 . 
     In an embodiment, the processor  14  is configured (programmed) to implement a virtual card  141 . Specifically, the virtual card  141  is implemented as a programmed software module comprising computer program code which is stored on a non-transient computer-readable medium and configured to control the processor  14  directly, by way of processor-specific instructions, or by way of interpretable instructions via an (intermediate) hardware abstraction layer, e.g. a virtual machine platform such as Java Virtual Machine (JVM) or a Java Card Open Platform (JCOP) as specified by the GlobalPlatform association. In an alternative embodiment, the virtual card  141  is implemented by way of VHDL (Very High Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language) or VHSIC Hardware Description Language running on a VHDL Simulator, which is implemented on processor  14 . 
     The virtual card  141  is configured to emulate the functions of a hardware-implemented smart card, i.e. a chip card or integrated circuit card comprising a processor and memory (RAM, ROM), for example an RFID card for interacting with a card reader according to a standardized RFID protocol as defined in standards such as ISO 18092, ISO 21481, ISO 15693, or ISO 14443, or according to a proprietary data transmission or RFID protocol. 
     In  FIG. 1 , reference numeral  142  refers to different applications APP_A, APP_B. In an embodiment, the applications APP_A, APP_B are implemented as card applications APP_A, APP_B of the virtual card  141 . The applications  142  are implemented as programmed software modules comprising computer program code, which is stored on a non-transient computer-readable medium and configured to control the processor  12  directly, by way of processor-specific instructions, or by way of interpretable instructions via the hardware abstraction layer. 
     The processor  14  or virtual card  141 , respectively, is configured to control access and execution of the (card) applications  142 , e.g. in adherence to respective standards and specifications for non-virtual (real) smart card modules. For example, access and execution of the (card) applications  142  are controlled in accordance with specifications defined by the GlobalPlatform association for managing applications, the MULTOS (Multi Operating System) security standard for smart cards defined by the MULTOS Consortium, TCOS (TeleSec Chipcard Operating System) defined by T-Systems International GmbH of Deutsche Telekom AG, the EMV standard defined by Europay International (now MasterCard Europe), MasterCard and VISA, or MTSC (Master-Token System Control) defined by LEGIC Identsystems AG. 
     Reference numeral  151  refers to application data for the different applications APP_A, APP_B, which is stored in the secured data store  15  and is accessible only to the respective applications APP_A, APP_B; for example, the data is card data for different card applications of the processor  14  or the virtual card  141 . 
     As illustrated in  FIG. 1 , the short-range communication device  2  comprises a short-range communication circuit  23  configured for short-range data exchange with the mobile communication apparatus  1 , e.g. a range of several centimeters or several meters. Accordingly, the short-range communication circuit  23  comprises an RFID transceiver, an NFC transceiver, a BLE transceiver, and/or a WLAN (Wi-Fi) transceiver compatible to the short-range communication circuit  13  of the mobile communication apparatus  1 . The short-range communication device  2  further comprises a secured data store  21  and a processor  22  connected to the short-range communication circuit  23  and the secured data store  21 . The secured data store  21  is accessible only for the processor  22  of the short-range communication device  2 . 
     In an embodiment, the short-range communication device  2  is embodied as an integrated circuit, i.e. a chip. In an embodiment, the short-range communication device  2  is implemented as a card reader, e.g. a card reader for interacting with a device according to a standardized RFID protocol as defined in standards such as ISO 18092, ISO 21481, ISO 15693, or ISO 14443, or according to a proprietary data transmission or RFID protocol. 
     The computer system  4  comprises one or more computers with one or more processors configured to communicate with the mobile communication apparatus  1  via mobile radio network  3 . The computer system  4  is a trusted entity and, depending on the embodiment and/or scenario, the computer system  4  is implemented as a computer center, a fixed computer, a mobile communication apparatus (as described above in the context of mobile communication apparatus  1 ), or a short-range communication device (as described above in the context of short-range communication device  2 ). In a scenario, the computer system  4  is used in connection (temporarily, removable or fixed) with a smart card having stored therein secured data for distribution by the computer system  4 . The computer system  4  is configured as a computerized access rights authority. The computer system  4  or the computerized access rights authority, respectively, is configured to store and manage cryptographic keys and/or access rights for accessing (smart) cards, including smart cards implemented by processor  14 , e.g. as virtual cards  141 . The cryptographic keys and/or access rights define for an identified smart card, the rights to read data from the smart card, write data into the smart card, and interact with a specific application of the smart card. 
     In the following paragraphs, exemplary sequences of steps performed by the computer system  4 , the mobile communication apparatus  1 , and the short-range communication device  2  are described with reference to  FIGS. 2 to 5 . 
       FIG. 2  illustrates an exemplary sequence of steps for transmitting a secured data package from the computer system  4  to the short-range communication device  2 . As will be described below in more detail, the secured data package is transmitted from the computer system  4  via the mobile communication apparatus  1  to the short-range communication device  2 . Depending on user selection, application scenario, and or configuration settings, the secured data package is transmitted in online-mode or in off-line mode. In on-line mode, the mobile communication apparatus  1  has connectivity via mobile radio network  3  to the computer system  4  and operates as an intermediary or relay entity for the computer system  4  to transfer the secured data package to the short-range communication device  2 , while the mobile communication apparatus  1  is connected via mobile radio network  3  to the computer system  4 , i.e. on-line. In off-line mode, the mobile communication apparatus  1  operates as a store-and-forward entity, receiving and storing the secured data package from the computer system  4  while there is connectivity via mobile radio network  3  to the computer system  4 , and, subsequently—at a later point in time, transferring the stored secured data package to the short-range communication device  2 , without having the requirement of connectivity via mobile radio network  3  to the computer system  4 , i.e. off-line. 
     As illustrated in  FIG. 2 , in the steps of block B, the secured data package is transmitted from the computer system  4  via mobile radio network  3  to the mobile communication apparatus  1 . 
     In optional preparatory step S 0 , a configuration request is transmitted from the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14 , respectively, to the computer system  4 . For example, the configuration request is submitted by an authorized service person who plans to setup and configure one or more specified short-range communication devices  2  to interact with one or more specific (card) applications implemented by processor  14  or installed on smart cards or virtual implementations of smart cards. 
     In step S 1 , responsive to the configuration request from the mobile communication apparatus  1 , or from another authorized unit or user, or on its own initiative, the computer system  4  generates a secured data package. The data package is secured in that at least some of its contents are encrypted. The encrypted contents of the secured data package can only be decrypted by a recipient with the appropriate decryption means, including decryption algorithm and secret decryption key. The content or payload of the secured data package comprises cryptographic access keys, access rights, configuration data, time information, and/or location information. The configuration data includes values of configuration parameters and/or executable program code. In an embodiment, the secured data package has a hierarchical and/or nested structure, i.e. the contents of a first secured data package, accessible by way of a first decryption key, may include another second secured data package, accessible by way of a different second decryption key. In an embodiment, the secured data package further includes (non-encrypted) or is linked to target or recipient information, including addressing information, identifying the intended recipient(s), e.g. network addresses or device identifiers of one specific or a group of short-range communication device(s), and target location information, specifying a geographic position or area of the intended recipient(s), e.g. coordinates, postal address, and/or descriptive information including floor number, room number or name, device number or name, etc. In an embodiment, the computer system  4  reads the secured data package or its contents from a smart card via an RFID or NFC interface or through a contact-based interface. 
     In step S 2 , the secured data package is transmitted from the computer system  4  via the mobile radio network  3  to the mobile communication apparatus  1 . 
     In step S 3 , the secured data package is received by the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14 , respectively. 
     In step S 4 , the mobile communication apparatus  1  enters the communication range of the short-range communication device  2 . The short-range communication device  2  detects the presence of the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14  or virtual card  141 , respectively, and authentication and access control is executed between the short-range communication device  2  and the processor  14  or virtual card  141  of the mobile communication apparatus  1  via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . One skilled in the art will understand that various standardized or proprietary cryptographic algorithms may be used to perform the authentication and access control protocols between the short-range communication device  2  and the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14  or virtual card  141 . The short-range communication device  2  or its processor  22 , respectively, and the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14  or virtual card  141 , respectively, are configured to perform the authentication and access control protocols, e.g. in adherence to respective standards and specifications for non-virtual (real) smart card modules, such as ISO 7816 and/or ISO 9798, as described by the GlobalPlatform association. 
     In step S 5 , upon successful authentication and authorization, the short-range communication device  2  or its processor  22 , respectively, generates a data read request. The data read request includes device location information  211  as stored in the short-range communication device  2 , which indicates the (configured/programmed) location of the particular short-range communication device  2 . The device location information  211  is stored in the secured data store  21  of the short-range communication device  2 . Depending on the scenario or embodiment, the device location information  211  is stored in the secured data store  21  before the short-range communication device  2  is installed, e.g. during manufacturing or configuration process, or through authenticated on-site configuration when it is already installed, as will be explained later in more detail. Typically, the short-range communication device  2  is installed as a stationary short-range communication device  2  and the device location information  211  indicates the configured stationary location of the short-range communication device  2 . Nevertheless, depending on the application, e.g. in connection with an automobile, the short-range communication device  2  can be mobile and the device location information  211  indicates the configured stationary location of the short-range communication device  2  where it is permitted to receive secured data packages from an authorized mobile communication apparatus  1 , e.g. in a servicing station or area. 
     In step S 6 , the data read request is transmitted from the short-range communication device  2  to the mobile communication apparatus  1  via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . 
     In step S 7 , using the apparatus location determination circuit  12 , the processor  14  of the mobile communication apparatus  1  determines its current location (in case of a dead spot, the available location determined last is used). In an embodiment, the processor  14  of the mobile communication apparatus  1  checks whether it has stored a secured data package with a target location matching the current location of the mobile communication apparatus  1 . If there is no secured data package with matching target location, the processor  14  generates an alert message, informing the user of the mobile communication apparatus  1  that no secured data package is available for the present location; otherwise, the processor  14  proceeds in step S 8 . 
     In step S 8 , the processor  14  of the mobile communication apparatus  1  further verifies the access authorization of the short-range communication device  2  by checking whether the device location information received from the short-range communication device  2  corresponds to the apparatus location determined for the mobile communication apparatus  1 . Specifically, the processor  14  checks whether the device location is within a defined zone or area around the apparatus location, e.g. a zone or area with a radius of five, ten, twenty, fifty or a hundred meters around the apparatus location. In an embodiment, height or altitude (location) information is included in the verification. 
     In an embodiment, the data read request further includes device time information  212  as stored in the short-range communication device  2 , and the processor  14  of the mobile communication apparatus  1  further verifies the access authorization by checking whether the device time information received from the short-range communication device  2  corresponds to apparatus time information stored (or derived from a clock) in the mobile communication apparatus  1 . 
     In case the device location is outside the reference zone or area around the apparatus location (or —if applicable—the device time information deviates from the apparatus time information by more than a defined threshold), in step S 12 , the processor  14  determines negative access authorization and rejects the read request. In an embodiment, the processor  14  generates and transmits in step S 12 * a negative feedback message to the computer system  4 , informing the computer system  4  about the rejection of a read request because of a lack of correspondence of location (and/or time) of the respective short-range communication device  2 . 
     Otherwise, in case the device location is within the reference zone or area around the apparatus location (and —if applicable—the device time information differs from the apparatus time information not more than the defined threshold), in step S 9 , the processor  14  determines whether the secured data store  15  includes one or more secured data packages having target location information that match the device location. If there is one secured data packages with matching target location, it will be included in the read response to the short-range communication device  2 . If there is more than one secured data packages with matching target location, the processor  14  shows on display  16  a list of the secured data packages with matching target location, including further target location information, such as postal address, floor number, room number or name, device number or name, project name, project ID, installation name, etc. The user is then asked to select from the list the secured data package that is intended for the particular short-range communication device  2  where the user is presently located with the mobile communication apparatus  1 . If there is no secured data package with matching target location information, the processor  14  determines negative access authorization and rejects the read request as described above in connection with steps S 12  and S 12 *. 
     As indicated schematically in  FIG. 2 , in off-line mode the steps of block B are executed prior to the mobile communication apparatus  1  entering the communication range of the short-range communication device  2  and executing authentication and access control protocols. In on-line mode, on the other hand, the steps S 0 , S 1 , S 2 , S 3  of block B may be executed at later point in time, for example after authorization has been verified in step S 8 , as indicated by reference numeral B*. In this case, the processor  14  of the mobile communication apparatus  1  checks, after execution of the steps of block B*, whether it has received a secured data package with a target location matching the current location of the mobile communication apparatus  1 . If there is no secured data package with matching target location, the processor  14  generates an alert message, informing the user of the mobile communication apparatus  1  that no secured data package was received for the present location; otherwise, the processor  14  proceeds in step S 9 . 
     Further, in step S 9 , the processor  14  generates and transmits to the short-range communication device  2  a data read response, including the determined and/or selected secured data package, via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . In an embodiment, in step S 9 *, the processor  14  generates and transmits a positive feedback message to the computer system  4 . 
     In an embodiment, the secured data package is deleted in the mobile communication apparatus  1  once the mobile communication apparatus  1  is no longer in proximity to the short-range communication device  2 , i.e. once the device location is outside the reference zone or area around the apparatus location. For that purpose, the processor  14  is further configured to check correspondence of the previously determined device location and the apparatus location, e.g. at a set time period after transmission of the secured data package in step S 9 , and to delete the secured data package in case of a lack of correspondence. Alternatively, deletion of the secured data package is initiated remotely by the computer system  4 . 
     In an embodiment, the processor  14  includes in the data read response the current location of the mobile communication apparatus  1  determined in step S 7 , and in optional step S 90 , the processor  22  of the short-range communication device  2  verifies the access authorization of the mobile communication apparatus  1  based on the current location received from the mobile communication apparatus  1 . Specifically, as illustrated in  FIG. 5 , in step S 91 , the processor  22  obtains the apparatus location information included in the data read response received from the mobile communication apparatus  1 . In step S 92 , the processor  22  verifies location correspondence by checking whether the device location information stored in the short-range communication device  2  corresponds to the apparatus location received from the mobile communication apparatus  1 . Thus, the processor  22  checks whether the apparatus location is within a defined zone or area around the device location, e.g. a zone or area with a radius of five, ten, twenty, fifty or a hundred meters around the device location. In an embodiment, height or altitude (location) information is included in the verification. 
     In an embodiment, the data read response further includes apparatus time included by the processor  14  of the mobile communication apparatus  1 , and the processor  22  of the short-range communication device  2  further verifies the access authorization of the mobile communication apparatus  1  by checking whether the apparatus time information received from the mobile communication apparatus  1  corresponds to device time information  212  as stored in the short-range communication device  2 , e.g. as programmed or determined by an internal clock of the short-range communication device  2 . 
     In case the apparatus location is outside the reference zone or area around the device location (or —if applicable—the apparatus time information deviates from the device time information by more than a defined threshold), in step S 93 , the processor  22  determines negative access authorization and rejects the data package from the mobile communication apparatus  1 . In an embodiment, the processor  22  generates and transmits in step S 94  a negative feedback message to the mobile communication apparatus  1 , informing the mobile communication apparatus  1  about the rejection of a data package because of a lack of correspondence of location (and/or time) of the respective mobile communication apparatus  1 . 
     Otherwise, in case the apparatus location is within the reference zone or area around the device location (and —if applicable—the apparatus time information differs from the device time information not more than the defined threshold), the processor  22  of the short-range communication device  2  accepts the data package from the mobile communication apparatus  1  and proceeds in step S 10 . 
     In step S 10 , the processor  22  extracts the encrypted content or payload from the secured data package included in the data read response, using a respective secret cryptographic key for decrypting the respective hierarchy or nesting level of secured data package from the computer system  4 . 
     In step S 11 , the processor  22  stores the extracted and decrypted content or payload from the secured data package in the secured data store  21  of the short-range communication device  2 . Specifically, the processor  22  stores in the secured data store  21  access keys and/or access rights  213 , configuration data  214 , location information  211 , and/or time information  212  extracted and decrypted from the secured data package. 
       FIG. 3  illustrates an exemplary sequence of steps for the mobile communication apparatus  1  setting device location information in the short-range communication device  2 . 
     In step S 13 , the mobile communication apparatus  1  is located inside the communication range of the short-range communication device  2 , and authentication and access control protocols are executed between the short-range communication device  2  and the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14  or virtual card  141 , respectively, as described above in the context of step S 4 . As part of the authentication and access control of step S 13 , the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14  or virtual card  141 , respectively, is authenticated as a “locator device” authorized to set the device location  211  of the short-range communication device  2 . 
     In step S 14 , upon successful authentication and authorization, the short-range communication device  2  or its processor  22 , respectively, generates a location inquiry, e.g. as part of a setup or configuration procedure. 
     In step S 15 , the location inquiry is transmitted from the short-range communication device  2  to the mobile communication apparatus  1  via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . 
     In step S 16 , using the apparatus location determination circuit  12 , the processor  14  of the mobile communication apparatus  1  determines its current location (in case of a dead spot, the available location determined last is used). 
     In step S 17 , the processor  14  (or the virtual card  141 , respectively) generates and transmits to the short-range communication device  2  a location inquiry response via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . The location inquiry response includes the determined current apparatus location, preferably in a secured fashion (encrypted). 
     In step S 18 , the processor  22  receives the location inquiry response and stores the received apparatus location as the device location  211  of the short-range communication device  2  in the secured data store  21 . 
     Subsequently, the device location  211  is used to verify the terminals access authorization based on correspondence of terminal and apparatus location, as described above in the context of step S 8 . 
       FIG. 4  illustrates an exemplary sequence of steps for controlled access of the short-range communication device  2  to the mobile communication apparatus  1 . 
     As described above, in step S 4 , the mobile communication apparatus  1  is within the communication range of the short-range communication device  2 , and authentication and access control protocols are executed between the short-range communication device  2  and the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14  or virtual card  141 , respectively. 
     In step S 20 , upon successful authentication and authorization, the short-range communication device  2  or its processor  22 , respectively, determines the cryptographic access key  213  for accessing the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its applications  142  or virtual card  141 , respectively. The short-range communication device  2  has stored one or more cryptographic access keys  213 , which are application and/or provider specific. The purpose of the key inquiry is to identify the cryptographic access key  213  that the short-range communication device  2  is to use in a subsequent access request, e.g. read/write requests, application interactions, transactions, sessions, etc., with the mobile communication apparatus  1 , its applications  142  or its virtual card  141 , respectively. 
     Specifically, in step S 21 , the short-range communication device  2  or its processor  22 , respectively, generates a key inquiry. 
     In step S 22 , the key inquiry is transmitted from the short-range communication device  2  to the mobile communication apparatus  1  via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . 
     In step S 23 , the mobile communication apparatus  1 , i.e. the processor  14  or the virtual card  141 , respectively, determines the cryptographic access key k i  that is to be used by the short-range communication device  2  in the current transaction or session with the mobile communication apparatus  1 , its applications  142  or its virtual card  141 , respectively. The processor  14 , determines a key identifier K IDi  for the identified cryptographic access key k i . The key identifier K IDi  is generated from the identified cryptographic access key k i  using a cryptographic one-way function h, that is, a function which is infeasible or extremely difficult to invert, for example a cryptographic hash function, K IDi =h(k i ). Depending on the embodiment, key identifier K IDi  is pre-generated (e.g. in the computer system  4 ) and stored in the mobile communication apparatus  1 , e.g. in a key identifier table, or the key identifier K IDi  is generated “on the go” in the mobile communication apparatus  1 , provided the cryptographic access key k i  are actually available and securely stored in the mobile communication apparatus  1 . 
     In step S 24 , the processor  14  (or the virtual card  141 , respectively) generates and transmits to the short-range communication device  2  a key inquiry response via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . The key inquiry response includes the generated key identifier K IDi . 
     In step S 25 , the processor  22  receives the key inquiry response and compares the received key identifier K IDi  to key identifiers K IDn  of the cryptographic access keys k n    213  stored in the secured data store  21  of the short-range communication device  2 . The key identifiers K IDn  of the cryptographic access keys k n    213  are derived from the cryptographic access keys k n    213  using the same cryptographic one-way function h, K IDn =h(k n ). Preferably, the key identifiers K IDn  of the cryptographic access keys  213  are “pre-calculated” and stored in in the secured data store  21  linked to the respective cryptographic access key k n    213 . 
     In step S 26 , upon successful identification K IDn =K IDn  of the cryptographic access key k i , the short-range communication device  2  or its processor  22 , respectively, generates an access request, using the identified access key k i . 
     In step S 27 , the access request is transmitted from the short-range communication device  2  to the mobile communication apparatus  1  via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . 
     In step S 28 , the mobile communication apparatus  1 , i.e. the processor  14  or the virtual card  141 , verifies legitimacy or authorization of the access request based on the cryptographic access key k i  specified to the short-range communication device  2  in the key inquiry response of step S 24  with the key identifier K IDn . In an embodiment, for increased security, the mobile communication apparatus  1 , i.e. the processor  14  or the virtual card  141 , further verifies legitimacy or authorization of the access request by performing the location and/or time based authorization verification described above in the context of step S 8 . 
     In step S 29 , upon successful and positive authorization verification, the processor  14  (or the virtual card  141 , respectively) executes the access request and generates an access request response. Depending on the scenario, the access request response includes a data response for an executed data read request, a write confirmation for an executed data write request, a transaction response for an executed transaction request, an application response for an executed application interaction request, a session response for an executed session request, etc. 
     In step S 30 , the processor  14  (or the virtual card  141 , respectively) transmits the access request response to the short-range communication device  2  via the short-range communication circuits  13 ,  23 . In an embodiment, the processor  22  verifies legitimacy or authorization of the mobile communication apparatus  1  or its processor  14  or virtual card  141 , respectively, by performing the location and/or time based authorization verification described above in the context of step S 90 . Thus, correspondence of apparatus time and/or location with device time and/or location, is not only applied for transferring secured data packages for configuration or key distribution purposes, but also for any other operational interaction and data exchange between the mobile communication apparatus  1  and the short-range communication device  2 . 
     It should be noted that, in the description, the computer program code has been associated with specific functional modules and the sequence of the steps has been presented in a specific order, one skilled in the art will understand, however, that the computer program code may be structured differently and that the order of at least some of the steps could be altered, without deviating from the scope of the disclosure.