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Are NFC Locks Safe? Encryption, Cloning & Relay Attacks
Properly implemented, yes — an NFC lock that pairs AES-256 encryption with challenge-response authentication has no practical wireless attack today. The honest caveat lives in the word implemented. The market spans hardware that never transmits a copyable credential and hardware that announces one fixed ID to anyone who asks, and which end of that spectrum a product sits on decides whether "NFC" means protection or exposure. So instead of the usual "buy from a reputable bran
11 hours ago


NFC vs RFID vs Bluetooth: Which Lock Technology Wins?
The short answer: NFC is not a competitor to RFID — it is a specialized subset of it. NFC (near field communication) is built on high-frequency RFID at 13.56 MHz, adds two-way communication, and works over roughly 4 cm (ISO/IEC 18092 and related standards). RFID is the broader family, spanning three frequency bands with read ranges from centimeters to ten meters. Bluetooth is a different technology entirely — a battery-dependent radio link designed for continuous connections
Jul 10


What is an NFC lock? How It Works & Why Battery-Free Wins
An NFC lock is an electronic lock that authenticates users through near-field communication (NFC) — a short-range wireless standard operating at 13.56 MHz over a range of roughly 4 cm (ISO/IEC 18092 and NFC Forum standards). Tap an NFC-enabled phone or card against the lock, the credential is verified, and the mechanism opens. Some designs go further: they carry no battery at all, drawing their operating power from the phone's NFC field itself. A lock with no battery, no wiri
Jul 8
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