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HPSHELTON

Programming, Privacy, Politics, Photography

Aug 5, 2012

Black Hat Hacker Gains Access to 4 Million Hotel Rooms with Arduino Microcontroller →

By plugging an Arduino microcontroller into the [lock], Brocious found that he could simply read this 32-bit key out of the lock's memory. No authentication is required — and the key is stored in the same memory location on every Onity lock.

If that wasn't bad enough, the lock unlocks when you play the key back to it. I feel safe.

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H. Parker Shelton

I'm just an ordinary thirty-something who's had some extraordinary opportunities. I graduated from Johns Hopkins University, work for Microsoft in Silicon Valley, code websites and applications, take the occasional photograph, and keep a constant eye on current events, politics, and technology. This blog is the best of what catches that eye.

 
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