The URL at the end of all those clips should show this to be a fake (the URL is for a Dutch ICT school or somesuch)
Also some of the details in the clips betray this. For instance: the matrixboards above the highways don't have a big enough resolution for photo's, the old-fashioned card-flip displays at the train stations do not have 'Alicante' listed at all (Alicante's not in the Netherlands...).
A true blackhat wouldn't exactly demonstrate or publicise the flaws of existing RFID, now would he? He would be out there evangelizing the faulty products so as to enlarge his playing field:)
White-Whitehat, Black-Whitehat, White-Blackhat, Black-Blackhat... it used to be simple...
There was this one game that allowed you to do just that: http://www.eidosinteractive.co.uk/gss/republic/ I'm not sure the game was even released, or that it shipped with all the features, I just remembered a preview in a games magazine about 4 years old that outlined what you said.
Cloudfire?
The URL at the end of all those clips should show this to be a fake (the URL is for a Dutch ICT school or somesuch)
Also some of the details in the clips betray this. For instance: the matrixboards above the highways don't have a big enough resolution for photo's, the old-fashioned card-flip displays at the train stations do not have 'Alicante' listed at all (Alicante's not in the Netherlands...).
A true blackhat wouldn't exactly demonstrate or publicise the flaws of existing RFID, now would he? He would be out there evangelizing the faulty products so as to enlarge his playing field :)
White-Whitehat, Black-Whitehat, White-Blackhat, Black-Blackhat... it used to be simple...
There was this one game that allowed you to do just that: http://www.eidosinteractive.co.uk/gss/republic/
I'm not sure the game was even released, or that it shipped with all the features, I just remembered a preview in a games magazine about 4 years old that outlined what you said.