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Science-Technology Title: This Little 3-D Printed Robot Cracks Combination Locks in 30 Seconds Samy Kamkar Careful what you leave in your lockers, high school students and gym-goers. An invasion of 3-D printed robots may be coming, capable of popping one of the worlds most ubiquitous brands of combination locks in as little as half a minute. On Thursday, well-known hacker Samy Kamkar published on his website the blueprint and software code for a 3-D-printable Arduino-based lock-opening robot he calls the Combo Breaker. Attach it to any of millions of Master Lock combination locks, turn it on, and it can take advantage of a Master Lock security vulnerability Kamkar recently discovered to open the lock in a maximum of five minutes with no human interaction. The machine pretty much brute-forces the lock for you, says Kamkar. You attach it, leave it, and it does its thing. In fact, the Combo Breaker is programmed to do far better than a mere brute-force attack. It takes advantage of a mathematical trick Kamkar revealed last month that allows anyonewith a little practiceto find the combination of a low-end Master Lock combination lock in only eight tries. That technique takes advantage of a manufacturing flaw: when the U-shaped shackle of one those combination locks is pulled while its rotor is turned, the cracker can feel resistance on certain numbers that help to reveal the position of the combination disks that determine the combination that opens the lock. In combination with some restrictions in possible combinations that Kamkar mathematically deciphered and encoded in a web-based tool, Kamkar exploited that information leak to cut out all but a few possible combinations. The resulting manual technique is easy enoughwriters at Ars Technica who tested it, for instance, were mostly able to pull it off after a couple of tries. The Combo Breaker goes even further, automating the process with zero skill or practice required from the user. But a Master Lock cracker willing to learn just one step in the process can also give the Combo Breaker a manual head start by merely turning a target locks rotor while tugging the shackle to find the first number that offers resistance and starting the robot at that position. Doing that, Kamkar says, enables his device to then crack a Master Lock combination in just 30 seconds. Without doing any work, this can open the lock entirely automatically in 80 combinations, Kamkar explains. If you do that one little test first, it can crack the lock in eight combinations or less. Kamkars robot consists of little more than a stepper motor, an Arduino chip that runs his cracking algorithm, a lever to pull the shackle, a rotor with a 3-D printed attachment to the locks face, and an optical sensor that tracks the location of the locks dial as it turns. All together, he says he built his prototype for less than $100. Heres Kamkars video breakdown of the robots creation: Master Lock didnt immediately respond to WIREDs request for comment. But Kamkar says his cracking technique is likely no major surprise to the lock maker, nor should it necessarily register as a serious security crisis. Master Lock gives its locks a 1-to-10 security rating displayed on its packaging, and the locks he tested were all rated 3. The moral is pretty simple, he says. If youre trying to protect valuables in a storage locker, you should probably be using a better lock. In fact, Kamkars method builds off a trick thats been known for years that reduces the number of possible combinations of those cheap Master Lock locks from 64,000 to just 100. Kamkars original goal was to build his robot to automate that tedious one-hundred-combination guessing. But when he drilled off the back of the locks to learn more about how they work, he soon discovered his own additional trick that further honed the attack, vastly reducing his robots cracking time. (Watch Kamkar explain the technical details of that technique here.) The Combo Breaker robot is only the latest in a long career of clever hacks for Kamkar, who works as an independent software developer and consultant. Kamkar gained fame in 2005 for creating the Samy worm, an attack that spread virally across Myspace, adding over a million friends to Samys Myspace account in less than 24 hours. Kamkars more recent work has included a drone designed to seek out and wirelessly hijack other drones and evercookie, a browser tracking cookie designed to be nearly impossible to remove. Kamkar says his goal in freely releasing the plans for the Combo Breaker was mostly to foster hacker experimentation and share his own enjoyment of what he describes as James Bond-style gadgetry. But he also hopes to teach the public that their low-end combination locks are laughably insecure. Security people know about this, but the general public doesnt, Kamkar says. I try to build things that are interesting to a general audience. And I hope getting this out there helps people make better decisions about the locks they use.
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#1. To: Orwellian Nightmare (#0)
Interesting. " If youre trying to protect valuables in a storage locker, you should probably be using a better lock. " Or, get a good quality safe.
Si vis pacem, para bellum
Or booby trap them using propane, gasoline vapors or such.
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