Community Pool access card HID ProxCard II. If you lose your card and want a
replacement, the charge is 50 dollars for a new one. Or you can have a
backup copy. ;)


__________________________________
Albert R. Campa


On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 1:12 PM, Robin Wood <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 20 September 2010 17:14, Matt Neely <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > 125 kHz RFID cards, also referred to as LF cards, are still very
> > common.  Although I have no hard numbers to back this up I'd venture to
> > guess that HID Prox cards are still the most widely deployed access
> > control card in the US and these cards are 125 kHz cards.  The only
> > thing that might throw this off is all US government organizations have
> > migrated to 13.56 MHz cards.
> >
> > In the 125 kHz range there are three types of RFID you'll commonly find
> > used by access control systems.  They are HID Prox, Indala and EM4100
> > (EM).  From what I've been able to research the device listed can only
> > clone cards that use the EM4100 chip.  EM cards tend to be used in
> > small/off label access control systems.  I've mainly seen EM cards used
> > at gyms and parking garages.  I've seen them vary rarely used for access
> > control in an office environment.  So depending on what you want to do
> > with it it might have limited usefulness.
> >
> > As part of an ongoing research project I'll probably be order the device
> > listed below as well as the reader, cards, panel, etc to build an access
> > control system.  Once all that stuff arrives I can confirm the devices
> > capabilities.
> >
> > In October I'm doing a presentation called Access Control Cards: The
> > Good, The Bad and The Clonable at the Cleveland Information Security
> > Summit.  After this talk I'll be doing some more blog posts and white
> > papers on what I discovered and will be getting into more depth on both
> > 125 kHz and 13.56 MHz cards.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Matt
> >
>
> So it can do some low end systems but probably not much beyond getting
> me into a gym locker room and maybe a parking garage. My problem is
> RFID is that I don't have access to any systems that use it and I
> don't work near any so anything I get to play with will be just that,
> a toy I'd guess, so I think I'll leave it and save my cash for a
> proper device when I actually need one and have time to use it
> properly.
>
> Thanks for the info.
>
> Robin
>
> >
> > Adrian Crenshaw wrote:
> >> I was under he impression from a freind of mine that 125KHz  was
> >> mostly for hobbiest stuff. Anyone know? One of the reviewers said his
> >> parking pass was a 125KHz.
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Adrian
> >>
> >> On Sun, Sep 19, 2010 at 5:57 PM, Robin Wood <[email protected]
> >> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> >>
> >>     Just found this standalone 125KHz RFID card cloner, I wondered if
> >>     anyone had seen one of these or if they thought it was worth the
> $66.
> >>
> >>     http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.17230
> >>
> >>     Robin
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> >>
> >>
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