Originally posted by BolshieBastard
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Contractor fare dodger
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Surprised no ones cracked the RFID chips to get through the oyster card readers.
If credit cards can be cloned surly they can?
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OnDigital (which became ITV Digital) was the easiest to crack. Probably the reason they went bust in such a big way :-)
A monthly subscription, including Sky sports and movies, at the time was about £55 per month. A blank card could be had for about £4 and a reader/writer for about £25. Codes appeared monthly on t'interweb within seconds of expiring. Was NOT a well thought through business model
When freedom comes along, don't PISH in the water supply.....Comment
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That and the fact you'd lose the signal if a leaf fell off a tree anywhere within a 1 mile radius.Originally posted by TestMangler View PostOnDigital (which became ITV Digital) was the easiest to crack. Probably the reason they went bust in such a big way :-)Will work inside IR35. Or for food.Comment
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Worked Ok for me, but I couldn't really complain if it didn'tOriginally posted by VectraMan View PostThat and the fact you'd lose the signal if a leaf fell off a tree anywhere within a 1 mile radius.
I remember reading a newspaper interview with some exec just after they died. They'd paid some stupid amount of money for a PPV Man U game and the exec said that for the cost of putting the game on, they could have flown the subscribers to the game, put them up in hotels and given them a grand each in spending money and lost a lot less on the deal. Meanwhile, a couple of million people watched it on cloned cards
When freedom comes along, don't PISH in the water supply.....Comment
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The old oysters were hackable - the balance is stored on the card. That's the reason there's a big push to get everyone onto Contactless.Originally posted by CloudWalker View PostSurprised no ones cracked the RFID chips to get through the oyster card readers.
If credit cards can be cloned surly they can?
⭐️ Gold Star ContractorComment
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My Virgin trains First Class tickets are emailed to me and I print them out at home.
They look really easy to copy, I'd be amazed if people weren’t already forging them.I'm sorry, but I'll make no apologies for this
Pogle is awarded +5 Xeno Geek Points.
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The first thing that should have made the BTP suspicious is that someone from Doncaster was travelling First Class.Comment
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and it doesnt work half the time.Originally posted by VectraMan View PostDo they not have a magnetic strip for the barriers? I thought that's how it worked.
Buy weekly ticket on train and it doesnt work until about the last day of use. Right PITA. Ticket gates just glance at it and open it for you.Rhyddid i lofnod psychocandy!!!!Comment
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The theory was that SKY had a lab in Israel for new technology/encryption and they had been tasked with cracking the OnDigital codes. Once it was done they set if free on t'internet to bring down their competitor.Originally posted by TestMangler View PostOnDigital (which became ITV Digital) was the easiest to crack. Probably the reason they went bust in such a big way :-)
A monthly subscription, including Sky sports and movies, at the time was about £55 per month. A blank card could be had for about £4 and a reader/writer for about £25. Codes appeared monthly on t'interweb within seconds of expiring. Was NOT a well thought through business model
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