Translate to German Translate to Spanish Translate to French Translate to Italian Translate to Portuguese Translate to Japanese Translate to Korean Translate to Russian Translate to Chinese

Posted Mar 14th 2008 1:47PM by Nilay Patel
Filed under: Misc. gadgets
Sure, it’s fun to say that one billion RFID cards are now at risk due to the Mifare Classic’s broken encryption, but it’s another thing to comprehend how widespread the fallout could potentially be — the London Underground’s Oyster Card is based on the chip, for example. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg: a new report says that the system can be broken in minutes using a typical PC — check the video after the break for a demonstration. We’ve also listed all the other now-potentially-vulnerable Mifare RFID implementations we could find, but there’s got to be more — put ‘em in comments!

Cities / countries using the Mifare Classic for access control and / or mass transit ticketing:

  • London (Oyster Card)
  • Boston
  • Netherlands (OV-Chipkaart)
  • Minneapolis / St. Paul
  • South Korea (Upass, T-money, Mybi)
  • Hong Kong
  • Beijing
  • Milan
  • Madrid (Sube-T)
  • Australia (Smartrider)
  • Sao Paulo (Bilhete Unico)
  • Rio de Janeiro (RioCard)
  • Bangkok
  • New Delhi

Tags: Hi-fi, gaming, games, wireless



Author:
admin
Time:
Friday, March 14th, 2008 at 4:58 pm
Category:
Gadgets
Comments:
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
RSS:
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Navigation:

Comments are closed.

Best Gadgets