I was sent this link by a fellow geek:
DIFRWearOur RFID Blocking Wallets ensure that cards with RFID tags within the wallet can NOT be read while the wallet is closed. This gives you the ability to control when, how and by whom your cards are accessed. To allow the RFID tag in the card to be read, simply open the wallet and direct it towards the reader.
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Governments, corporations, franchises and banks are now using RFID tags embedded in identification cards. These tags allow the cards to be read remotely. You may have one of these chips in your wallet or passport right now.
The RFID tags in identification cards have been shown to be insecure (Click here for examples of RFID insecurities). Attackers are able to read and copy information stored on these tags to create copies they can use themselves!
Now I’m not in a position to say whether these things work, since I lack both a “blocking” wallet and a RFID test rig with which to experiment; moreover since I am not in a position to fly to the States for a while, I am not going to be visiting my favourite toy store any time soon.
However, I would like to make an appeal for experimentation:
Some months ago I was learned of an old hack that UK-based IT consultants and Cable-TV company engineers used to use to disable their cellphones in such a way that they were not registered as “switched off” by the cellphone company.The effect of this was that the person phoning the engineer would be told “the person being dialled is unobtainable”, rather than “the phone you are trying to reach is switched-off”.
This was beneficial because bonuses were paid for coverage and reachability (etc) and whilst it was not-OK to switch your phone off, it was perfectly acceptable to be in a cellphone reception “blackspot”, even if you happened to be carrying your blackspot around with you.
The method for “blackspotting” was simple: drop the phone into an anti-static bag:
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What I want to know is: does this work for RFID?
My preliminary experiments with some other RF-loop stored-value cards (the ones used around my office for food purchases) suggest that antistatic bags are not “proof” enough to resist the chirp and response of those systems; however there will certainly be some variations in signal strength, frequency, and potential for protection from passive sniffing rather than resisting a RF chirp from a distance of 2 inches.
So: if you have an RFID card, and a reader, could you please see if antistatic bags – applied as demonstrated – have any attenuation effect on the cards, and post a comment below?
Thanks!






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