This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self-published sources.(September 2021) |
Date invented | 2007 |
---|---|
FPGA | Xilinx Spartan®-II |
Processor | Atmel AT91SAM7S64 |
Memory | 64 kB flash |
Proxmark3 is a multi-purpose hardware tool for radio-frequency identification (RFID) security analysis, research and development. It supports both high frequency (13.56 MHz) and low frequency (125/134 kHz) proximity cards and allows users to read, emulate, fuzz, and brute force the majority of RFID protocols.[1]
Originally created by Jonathan Westhues and published as open-source hardware, it was later picked up by a community of developers who significantly improved both hardware and software in comparison with the original version. Proxmark3 gathered a large community of security researchers investigating RFID access control systems, who expand and maintain the project while using it in their own research.[2] The original Proxmark3 hardware platform served as the basis for new device versions, including commercial ones.[1]
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