I've been having great success device hacking with the flipper zero.

A lot of people dismiss it as a toy that kids on tiktok play with. It was actually designed as a penetration testing tool, and kids with a little bit of know how started doing illegal shit with it and putting it on tiktok.

It can interact with RFID,NFC,infared,sub ghz, and wifi if you get the addon. You can also use it as a rubber ducky, and as an added perk, if you install 3rd party firmware this is an out of the box way to use a rubber ducky via bluetooth.

You can copy any signal if you can figure out what frequency and modulation it is. A lot of things are too secure for this to work, mileage may very.

The NFC reading is flawless, I copied a hotel key and opened the door with the flipper among other things. Couldn't get it to do anything useful with a debit card, but it did give me the information off the chip.

As for infared and sub ghz, you can copy signals yourself or download as many things off github as your SD card can carry. There's plenty out there. I've hacked into the PA system effortlessly in CVS, Walgreens, and Lowes. I've also shut off random TVs all over the place.

The rubber ducky feature is really dependent on how recently what you install was created. I find a lot of the rubber ducky software you can get on this are outdated and don't work. If you know duckscript that's an easy work around though.

I'm a hobbyist grey hat hacker and this is my first venture outside of kali linux, but this device hacking stuff extremely different. There very minimal security systems in place for the types of devices this thing can get in. It's kind of like how computer hackers could break into something quickly with very little skill right after the internet was put out.

submitted by /u/Aware-Locksmith6757
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from hacking: security in practice https://ift.tt/yVhB21E

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