The hacking technique lays bare the security vulnerabilities of certain models of Saflok-brand RFID-based keycard locks used in 131 countries worldwide Erin Clack is a Staff Editor for PEOPLE. She has ...
Your next hotel room stay may not be as secure as you hope it is. A group of security researchers who were invited to a Las Vegas hotel to identify digital security ...
For decades, hotel guests have been warned about the dangers lurking in their pockets. Keep your room key away from your phone. Don't put it near your credit cards. That magnetic clasp on your purse?
There is a new warning for travelers after researchers, posed as hackers, expose a security flaw that could open millions of hotel-room doors. The good news is, they're helping to fix the problem ...
Researchers have developed a simple exploit capable of unlocking all of the doors at more than 10,000 hotels worldwide. Saflok-brand RFID-based keycard locks have been around for 36 years. But only in ...
It's not just a lock that can be picked, it's a lock that has a major design flaw just begging to be picked. That sounds pretty defective to me. The manufacturer should have thought of obvious ways ...