![]() ![]() ![]() Openly allowing any old reader is unsafe no matter the encryption. Lets address your concerns one at a time, to see how well the hold up.ġ. Posted in Radio Hacks, Security Hacks Tagged rfid, security Post navigation ![]() We don’t know about you, but you might want to line your wallet with aluminum foil from now on. His build log is full of self-denegration that shows both how humble is and how easy it is for anyone with the requisite skill set to clone the bank card sitting in your wallet. What’s really impressive about the build is that says he’s not a programmer or electrical engineer. is able to capture all the data from an RFID card, write that data to the SD card, and emulate a card using his RFID cloner. ’s build is very simple consisting of only an Arduino and SD card reader. ![]() ’s build uses a smaller off-the-shelf RFID reader, but he’s still able to read RFID cards from about a foot away. The project was inspired by this build that took a much larger RFID reader and turned it into a sniffer capable of covertly reading debit cards and passports from the safety of a backpack or briefcase. ’s RFID sniffer gets around all those problems, and provides yet another reason to destroy all the RFID chips in your credit cards. RFID hacking has been around for years, but so far all the builds to sniff data out of someone’s wallet have been too large, too small a range, or were much too complicated for a random Joe to build in his workshop. ![]()
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