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Police admit they're 'stumped' by mystery car thefts
Read More about it...http://www.today.com/news/police-admit-theyre-stumped-mystery-car-thefts-6C10169993
How are these thieves exploiting automotive keyless entry?
A new attack on automotive keyless entry systems is making headlines and we want to know how you think it’s being done. The Today Show reports that vehicles of different makes and models are being broken into using keyless entry on the passenger’s side of the car. It sounds like thieves steal items found inside rather than the vehicles themselves which makes these crimes distinctly different from the keyless ignition thefts of a year ago.
http://hackaday.com/2013/06/05/ask-hackaday-how-are-these-thieves-exploiting-automotive-keyless-entry/
Ask Hackaday: Can you steal a car with a mini tesla coil?
Last week we caught wind of a piece from the Today Show that shows very technically minded thieves stealing cars with a small device. Cops don’t know how they’re doing it, and of course the Today show (and the Hackaday comments) were full of speculation. The top three theories for how these thieves are unlocking car doors are jamming a keyless entry’s ‘lock signal’, a radio transmitter to send an ‘unlock’ code, or a small EMP device touched to the passenger side door to make it unlock.
Car Thieves exploiting automotive keyless entry
- Ask Hackaday: Can you steal a car with a mini tesla coil?
- Ask Hackaday: How are these thieves exploiting automotive keyless entry?
- Police admit they're 'stumped' by mystery car thefts - TODAY.com
- Keyless BMW cars prove to be very easy to steal
- Handheld Tesla/EMP V1 of 10 - YouTube
- RapidFire II Slot / Fruit Machine Jammer - $100 Credit - EMP Hack - Truco Maquina Tragamonedas - YouTube
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