[ISN] DARPA-Funded Radio HackRF Aims To Be A $300 Wireless Swiss Army Knife For Hackers

From: InfoSec News <alerts_at_private>
Date: Mon, 22 Oct 2012 01:51:05 -0500 (CDT)
http://www.forbes.com/sites/andygreenberg/2012/10/19/darpa-funded-radio-hackrf-aims-to-be-a-300-wireless-swiss-army-knife-for-hackers/

By Andy Greenberg
Forbes Staff
Security
10/19/2012

Since the days of Alan Turing, the promise of a digital computer has 
been that of a universal machine, one that can be a word processor one 
minute and a robot brain the next. So why are radios, a technology even 
older than computers, still designed stubbornly to do one thing -- like 
3G, Wifi, FM, or GPS -- for their entire lives?

In fact, the era of the single-purpose radio is over, says Michael 
Ossmann, the founder of an Evergreen, Colorado company called Great 
Scott Gadgets. And he believes he’s built the one cheap, hacker-friendly 
radio to rule them all.

At the ToorCon hacker conference in San Diego Saturday, Ossmann and his 
research partner Jared Boone plan to unveil a beta version of the HackRF 
Jawbreaker, the latest model of the wireless Swiss-army knife tools 
known as “software-defined radios.” Like any software-defined radio, the 
HackRF can shift between different frequencies as easily as a computer 
switches between applications–It can both read and transmit signals from 
100 megaherz to 6 gigaherz, including frequencies as low as the range 
used by FM radio up to the gigaherz frequencies used by Wifi or 
experimental wireless protocols for cars communicating in traffic. In 
between those bookends lies everything from police radio to cellular 
signals from AT&T and Verizon to garage door openers–all signals that 
HackRF can instantaneously intercept or reproduce. And at Ossmann’s 
target price of $300, the versatile, open-source devices would cost less 
than half as much as currently existing software-defined radios with the 
same capabilities.

[...]


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Received on Sun Oct 21 2012 - 23:51:05 PDT

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