Research, development and trades concerning the powerful Proxmark3 device.
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I'm currently doing a research in Germany in my class (in Heidelberg) about security after being amazed by the "Boston Subway MBTA Security Research" (http://web.mit.edu/zacka/www/mbta.html); that I think you all know for sure.
I'm analyzing the "smart cards" that the university is currently using for small transaction (ex: vendor machine).
I managed to open (physically) one of these cards, but I have no idea how to recognize which band they use (I think 13.56 MHz) and what kind of cards they really are. After having read on internet I thought that they could be iClass, but I repeat, I have no idea.
I really hope that someone here can help me.
(is this the right section?)
Thanks, l
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I forgot to post the link to the photo of the "chip" inside this card, I'm sorry
http://imgur.com/BjGeN3I
thanks, l
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This is the Card with "measures"
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Last question:
With Proxmark3 I could read it? Even if this was just 125KHz?
Sorry for the multiple posts
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Can you post more pics of the chip ?
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Last question:
With Proxmark3 I could read it? Even if this was just 125KHz?
With a pm3 you would be able to determine a lot more about it, what frequency and type, and *communicate* with it. If you could *read* it depends on whether the info on the card is encrypted and whether that encryption has been cracked. The pm3 can communicate with both types.
When you cracked the card open, the size and shape of the antenna could perhaps have indicated if it was 125KHZ or 13.56Mhz, but I'm not an expert there..
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