I'm an idiot - can I hire one of you to help me?

Greetings,

Hope everyone is doing well today.

I’ve visited this site multiple times and purchased a kit or two but never fully figured out the process of programming the chip before insertion. I own a few different entities all of which utilize RFID access at the doors/offices and I’m tired of forgetting my fobs and love the idea of this.

I’m looking for someone that I can hire to walk me through the process, step-by-step, and ultimately also show me some other cool abilities with my implant.

Hopefully someone is willing! I’m available on whatsapp, signal, telegram, and email.

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If they’re X-Series you’ll usually have to program them post-install, they’re quite difficult to connect to inside the metal needle. If you have flexies though they should be programmable in the packaging

If you tell us which implants you got, and what chip types you are looking to clone we can probably help you out

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The most expensive package but I need to locate it. If anything I can just buy whatever’s needed.

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Do you already have a reader/programmer like the Proxmark3 or Flipper Zero?

To start with we need to identify the chips you’re looking to program onto implants, then we can start a list of compatible implants

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I have the Proxmark3 but couldn’t figure out how to use it. I also have one of these Amazon.com.

all of my doors are compatible with these. Amazon.com

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We can probably help you with that too if you’d like :classic_tongue:

I’ve never used one of those personally, but that sounds promising, does it tell you a chip type when you scan them? Something like “HID Prox” or “EM-something-or-other” perhaps?

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You are absolutely not an idiot. There is a learning curve if you’re starting from scratch. Fortunately it’s not too steep if you go step by step and have the help of a maestro like Aox!

The chip you have is a great choice because it’s versatile. Once installed you will be able to programme the HF chip with your phone and the LF side with your Proxmark3.

The fact that you can’t programme the chip prior to insertion is normal: the metal needle blocks the signal. Once placed under the skin some people get a read immediately and can start using their chips straight away while many others have to wait (normally no more than two weeks) for the area to settle down.

The fact that it happens this way round (installation then programming) is important if you have a specific end use for your chip. I believe that many of the people on this forum, myself included, install this type of chip without a specific use in mind because they know they will get lots of use out of its multifaceted tool set. I can do a bunch of stuff with the phone-writable HF chip and if I want an access system to work with the LF side I purchase a system that I know is compatible.

When you do have pre-existing access systems you want to open with your chip you have to first check that they use a protocol that can be run on your chip. There are some protocols that can’t be used and some that can be run on very specific chips.

The good news is that the NExT chip covers a pretty broad range of protocols so the chances are good.

As you already have the chip I would look to getting it installed ASAP! At the very least you can start using the HF side to perform 4 distinct functions:

  • Triggering an event on your phone (setting a timer, opening a web page, setting your maps app to take you home etc),

  • Triggering an event on other people’s phones (VCard, URL etc),

  • 888 bytes storage using app like NFC tools etc

  • Opening certain access systems, log on to your computer etc

Then you can learn to use the Proxmark3 to get the LF side to open many commercially available access systems.

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