EletiofeYour Gym Locker May Be Hackable

Your Gym Locker May Be Hackable

-

- Advertisment -

Thousands of electronic lockers found in gyms, offices, and schools could be vulnerable to attacks by criminals using cheap hacking tools to access administrator keys, according to new research.

At the Defcon security conference on Sunday, security researchers Dennis Giese and “braelynn” demonstrated a proof-of-concept attack showing how digital management keys could be extracted from lockers, copied, and then used to open other lockers in the same location. The researchers focused on various models of electronic locks from two of the world’s biggest manufacturers, Digilock and Schulte-Schlagbaum.

Over the past few years, the researchers, who both have backgrounds in lock picking, have been examining various electronic locks that use numerical keypads, allowing people to set and open them with a PIN. The work comes on the back of various examples of hotel door locks being found to be hackable, vulnerabilities in high-security locks, and commercial safes being alleged to have backdoors.

For the research, Giese and braelynn purchased electronic locks on eBay, snapping up those sold after some gyms closed during the Covid-19 pandemic and from other failed projects. Giese focused on Digilock, while braelynn looked at Schulte-Schlagbaum. Over the course of the research, they looked at legacy models from Digilock dating from 2015 to 2022 and models from Schulte-Schlagbaum from 2015 to 2020. (They also purchased some physical management keys for Digilock systems.)

Showing how security flaws could be abused by a prepared hacker, the researchers say they can take the electronic lock apart, then extract the device’s firmware and stored data. This data, Giese says, can contain PINs that have been set, management keys, and programming keys. The manager key ID can be copied to a Flipper Zero or cheap Arduino circuit board and used to open other lockers, Giese says.

“If you access one lock, we can open all of them in whatever the unit is—the whole university, the whole company,” Giese says. “We can clone and emulate keys very easily, and the tools aren’t that complicated.” Whoever owns the lockers manages them, Giese says.

Ahead of developing this proof-of-concept attack, Giese says, it took some time and effort to understand how the locker systems function. They took the locks apart and used cheap debugging tools to access the devices’ erasable, programmable read-only memory, known as EEPROM. Often, in the locks they tested, this was not secured, allowing data to be pulled from the system.

“From the EEPROM, we can pull out the programming key ID, all manager key IDs, and the user PIN/ User RFID UID,” Giese says. “Newer locks erase the set user PIN when the locker is unlocked. But the PIN remains if the locker was opened with a manager key/programming key.”

The researchers say they reported the findings to both impacted companies, adding they had spoken to Digilock about the findings. Digilock tells WIRED it has issued a fix for vulnerabilities found. The researchers say Schulte-Schlagbaum did not respond to their reports; the company did not respond to WIRED’s request for comment.

Latest news

Inside the Race to Develop a Test for the Rare Andes Hantavirus

As passengers return to the US from the cruise that saw a rare hantavirus outbreak, much of the country...

OnlyFans’ First-Gen Creators Are Retiring—and Some Are Begging You to Forget They Exist

On April 28, just before noon, Win White logged onto X and posted a series of messages to his...

Sony Bravia Theater Bar 5 Review: Basic Bar, Big Sound

Review: Sony Bravia Theater Bar 5The latest Bravia Theater soundbar strips away the nice-to-have extras, but its crisp and...

A Conspiracy Theory About QR Codes Has Led to Chaos Ahead of Georgia’s Midterms

QR codes are at the center of the latest conspiracy theory in Georgia’s elections. And it’s largely thanks to...
- Advertisement -

Meet the Sad Wives of AI

If i had to listen to another minute of my husband talking about Claude Code, I might have actually...

29 days to the World Cup: Who designs the kits for the teams in the tournament?

The countdown to the 2026 World Cup is on! Each day ahead of the tournament’s return to North America,...

Must read

Inside the Race to Develop a Test for the Rare Andes Hantavirus

As passengers return to the US from the cruise...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you