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  • comrade1234 10 minutes

    Since its IR is it line of site? How would you go about changing every tag in the store to say 'Palestine $0.00', for example?

  • stavros 2 hours

    I am overjoyed to see this story here, we haven't gotten a lot of these hacks lately. Well done!

    encom 1 hours

    Hacks? In my Hacker News? The nerve!

    _joel 52 minutes

    Are these hacks or cracks. I'd say the latter.

  • Aboutplants 26 minutes

    I was in college when self checkout became a thing and it took us all of about 45 seconds to realize that you could just check everything out as bananas. Steak was weighed and priced at 4011 (banana code) as the stoned teenager cashier paid no attention. Everything on the receipt was literally Bananas

    DangerousPie 11 minutes

    Congratulations, you have discovered the concept of shoplifting!

    stavros 22 minutes

    Couldn't you also not just check stuff in? These are all obvious drawbacks, it's not really a high-scrutiny environment.

    manarth 56 seconds

    Most self-checkouts I've come across have weight validation – "Unexpected item in the bagging area".

    Categorising things as "bananas" tricks the checkout into accepting the weight of an item, and you pay the appropriate price per bananagram.

  • voidUpdate 2 hours

    I still don't think I've seen an actually useful application for a Flipper Zero. It's all just "use this to change store price tags" or "here's how to disconnect all bluetooth devices", but also "don't actually use this, because it would be illegal, this is just for educational purposes"

    rjh29 2 hours

    Turns out it's what they said it was all along, an educational device.

    cucumber3732842 2 hours

    It's useful for dealing with the industrial equivalent of IOT garbage

    avian 2 hours

    This one provides the source and asks you to build it yourself so at least it has some credibility for the "education use only" claim.

    I've seen similar things posted on here before that had a binary build only and zero technical documentation. It was really hard to see any kind of research or education value in those.

    OuterVale 1 hours

    I use mine for all sorts. I volunteer at a second-hand shop so use it to set up remotes for donated media devices, I've used it to run scripts to apply the same changes to many computers that aren't on a group policy via BadUSB, I've used it for toys-to-life games, and very much more. There are plenty of genuine uses if you're cluey.

    vbezhenar 29 minutes

    Yeah, I bought it and it collects a dust since then. Fun device but I have no idea how to use it in my life.

    imp0cat 1 hours

    [flagged]

    estimator7292 24 minutes

    Cool racism bro

    master-lincoln 32 minutes

    As if devices created in Russia would all be "useless" or only for illegal purposes.

    I smell prejudice

    rickdeckard 2 hours

    Beside of how the media often tries to present it, the value of Flipper Zero is not for everyone to "become a hacker with this simple app".

    Its value is to provide a standardized hardware platform for (white hat) hackers for probing, prototyping, refining and sharing of security research in the fields its hardware supports (Sub-GHz RF, NFC, IR, and custom external boards via simple Input/Output pins).

    Prior to that, everyone who wanted to research e.g. RF security had to either build/assemble something custom or buy much more expensive equipment. This created a barrier to collaborate on research, as everyone had to buy/build the same setup.

    On top of that, Person A researching some RF topic selected an RF-transceiver from Company X, Person B used a component and a proprietary SDK of Company Y, so consolidating both work streams for a better foundation for all RF-related research required alot of time and effort from someone, breaking workflows of at least one group of researchers, etc.

    In contrast, security research which utilizes Flipper Zero can be reproduced and built upon by everyone. All the work is harmonized on the same Hardware architecture, so it's easy for someone familiar with the platform to dive straight into a new idea without having to build a new breadboard, select a chipset, buy additional probing equipment etc.

    kotaKat 1 hours

    I'm tired of the "security research" angle when it's all just kids playing with ESP32 deauther attacks presented to them on a silver platter.

    I should not have to put up with children going "JUST SECURE YOUR NETWORKS BRO" because they spent $30 on some eBay "maurauder" dongle to be a pissant.

    lan321 1 hours

    It's probably good to have kids with no big plans messing with your security now and then. Keeps you on your toes, and you can't really pass it off as an act of god if a teenager pwns you.

    rft 59 minutes

    And a minority of those kids will get curious about the How and Why. Those are the security nerds of the future securing the networks against both the kids they were themselves and actual malicious actors.

    Source: Early interest in wifi security, including in other people's networks, lead me down an education and career in security

    master-lincoln 30 minutes

    the alternative is to put up with crackers abusing your insecure network for their own benefit

    StingyJelly 1 hours

    just secure your networks bro

    gausswho 43 minutes

    Hacker News. Where you either die a pissant or become the villain with a fistful of RSUs.

    kotaKat 30 minutes

    I sure wish I was wealthy and had a fistful of RSUs. You wanna send me some? I make 5% over my area's 80% median income and I can't even get housing because I "make too much money" despite being $3000 too rich.

    I'm pretty tired of being the network guy in the field playing remote hands having to be on the front lines of all of this bullshit having to explain to decision makers that a bunch of shitty kids are running around and there's no real solution that we can just "fix" this with.

    I'm tired. If they're not deauthing our networks they're breaking into rooms with the goddamn card copying and fuzzing functionality and stealing shit.

  • weli 1 hours

    This is pretty dangerous. At least in my country the displayed price must be honored and they cannot refuse the sale.

    gus_massa 1 hours

    I guess they can use the cameras to show you were tampering with the labels and call the police. Somewhat related xkcd https://xkcd.com/1494/

    wyldfire 11 minutes

    In your country merchants are not obligated to honor fraudulently altered price displays.

    dewey 42 minutes

    Probably mostly dangerous for the user, or are people routinely writing their own price signs in the store and then "buying" it for less? Walking up to the lot at the car store and crossing out some zeros? Don't see how this would be any different.

    xingped 4 minutes

    Back in the day people used to swap/edit price tags a lot. Also making fake coupons with the same knowledge. It was a pretty common and easy form of shoplifting since all barcodes used to do was just encode the pricing/discount information.

    ModernMech 37 minutes

    What they do is swap bar codes, or they code organic fruit as regular, or they "forget" to scan in the self checkout, but yes.

    dewey 33 minutes

    So it's just stealing with extra steps.

    walrus01 17 minutes

    This is a big reason why retail product barcode stickers (not barcodes printed directly on a package as it comes from the manufacturer) are now commonly printed on frangible stock with built in slices in it which breaks apart in 3, 4 or more pieces if you try to peel it off.

    rithdmc 3 minutes

    Hardly matters when one may print their own barcode on labels and cover the frangible one.

    rickdeckard 1 hours

    Usually the advertised price must be honored, because it may have brought the customer to your store.

    For prices displayed on the shelf-label inside the store the law is usually not that strict (YMMV), as a shop-owner can refuse sale on check-out (otherwise I could put a pricetag on e.g. a shopping-basket and the shop-owner would be legally required to sell me the basket...).

    Besides, most shops I've seen (in Europe) already moved from Infrared communication to RF (NFC or proprietary), for centralized shelf-label management without handheld devices. So all this study (and the underlying reverse engineering of the IR-protocol) might do is probably accelerate the transition from IR to RF-based ESL...

    rimunroe 36 minutes

    > Usually the advertised price must be honored, because it may have brought the customer to your store.

    This is not the case for groceries in Massachusetts at least. If there’s a discrepancy between the tag’s price and the scanned price the store must charge the customer the lowest of the two: https://www.mass.gov/price-accuracy-information

    master-lincoln 36 minutes

    How is the transport medium changing anything?

    To me this is about having protocols that are suitable so not anybody can write to these labels without knowing a store secret or using replay attacks.

    mschuster91 10 minutes

    > How is the transport medium changing anything?

    it's mostly about efficiency. IR based, an employee needs to physically walk around. RF based, place a transmitter or two in the building and the system now works fully automated.