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by K2h
5029 days ago
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Real engineered solution - without new hardware: If this thing is not reprogrammable, and only has an EPROM - do some real enginerering and calculate the ADDITION of bits to set to disable the exploit. Thats the one I would be working on if I worked for Onity. alternativly, take a mechanical approach to the problem - if you can live without the connector for servicing the lock. 1) De-solder the connector on the board and cut the traces/pads off the board - it won't stop everyone, but enough that have read of the exploit and try to follow through on it without applying any more critical thinking will be thwarted. 2) epoxy over the connector (they kind of did this with the security screw fix, but not really) 3) leave the connector, but add so much resistance between the connector and uP that you have to use a special interface cable to talk to the uP. no one will be able to tell until they pull the lock apart that its not stock. |
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I've written at length about how this can be fixed; Onity has not yet responded with an effective solution.
(I'm the original researcher)
Edit: Link to my post is here: http://daeken.com/onitys-plan-to-mitigate-hotel-lock-hack Note that their statement about how they would fix it was pulled after Forbes quoted my post.