Workshop: Matthew Caruana Galizia

RFID Sniffer Workshop

Tin-foil Wallets - a participant’s report of the first Sniffer Workshop

27 mrt 2009

No one else seemed to notice that smoke was pouring out of the soldering iron in front of me. Should I panic, or just ignore it? Maybe this was just our host’s way of setting the mood. Incense for geeks. Who needs frankincense when you’ve got burning metal?

Our host being the mild-mannered and smiling Marc Boon, who turned up at Mediamatic Bank wearing a retro zip-up and a thick beard. The kind of look that says, give me a piece of copper wire and I’ll turn your keychain into a mobile phone in five minutes flat.

Marc travels the Netherlands on various RFID-related events. This was his third ‘RFID workshop’, but his first with Mediamatic. ‘RFID is everywhere,’ says Marc, though without the tone of alarm that would make him sound like a conspiracy theorist. ‘They’re in access badges, bank cards, library cards, loyalty cards, books, toys and even clothing.’

RFID stands for Radio Frequency Identification. Objects that are tagged transmit unique codes that can be used to identify individuals with, as well as without, their consent. Marc’s workshop teaches participants how to build an RFID ‘sniffer’: a credit-card sized circuit board emblazoned with the outline of a dog. Press the button, and a small LED on the circuit will glow when it is in the presence of an RFID-tagged object.

The 15 participants are interesting in themselves. All very keen, but all very different in appearance and in person. Two art students sitting in the far corner, Ferdi and Niels, are here to learn more about the technology and how to incorporate it into their projects. Sitting next to them, and maybe two decades older, is Kees, a film producer who has worked on some projects that used RFID. He uses his iPhone to show me a Dutch advert for Swinxs, a toy for toddlers that uses RFID-technology. At this, Simona chimes in. She is a PhD student researching ‘ubiquitous urban games’ at Limburg University in Belgium.

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A close look at the sniffer. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic.

Marc starts the workshop with a quick introduction to soldering. ‘It takes me about 20 minutes to solder all the components onto the circuit,’ he says, ‘but it will take you about an hour.’ Four hours later, Marc was helping me fix my circuit board after I yanked off a bit of it. Within a few minutes, he was done, and by teatime I was out of there with a perfectly functioning RFID sniffer.

What do you do once you’ve discovered cards tagged with an RFID in your wallet? “Some people line their wallet with metal foil, and that’s enough to disable it.” Does that mean I’ll have to walk around with a tin-foil wallet as well as a tin-foil hat? No, not unless you pick up one of Mediamatic’s free stylish RFID-shields.


Review by Matthew Caruana Galizia, participant of the workshop.

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A close look at the sniffer. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic. A magnifying glass is used to work on soldering tiny details on the sniffer. Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic. Alice Bodanzky

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Marc Boon demonstrates the sniffer. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic.

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Introduction by Marc Boon. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic. Alice Bodanzky

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Soldering and talking. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic. Alice Bodanzky

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Participants help each other out. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic. Alice Bodanzky

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Checking components soldered on the sniffer. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic. Alice Bodanzky

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RFID Sniffer workshop series - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic. 27 maart 2009: RFID Sniffer workshops Mar 09 - Jun 09: In a series of workshops, Marc Boon taught participants, ranging from art students to PhD candidates, how to make their own RFID sniffer. The RFID sniffer is a simple analog electronic circuit which can detect the presence of 13.56 MHz RFID tags. These tags are commonly used in all kinds of plastic cards like access badges and bank cards. But books, toys, and even clothing might… Alice Bodanzky

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Everyone at work on their sniffer. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic. Alice Bodanzky

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Working on the sniffer. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic.

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The final adjustments to the sniffer. - Photo taken at the first RFID Sniffer Workshop at Mediamatic.

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Your end result. Picture / design by Marc Boon . -