16:12 in the UK we had a spate of people filling the cash machines with propane and blowing them open that way, they started fitting gas sniffer devices (similar to those fitted to forklifts in enclosed spaces) that engage some sort of defence not sure what, be it the release of some sort of gas suppression like an inert gas, or just an alarm to a control centre.
Did you know: Nautilus Hyosung ATMs have "Stop attacking immediately" screen. Supposedly it is activated when the shock sensor or tamper switches are being activated. Found this out through the update files.
the QR is for the teck/admin to pull up password records thats is your serial number of the system board. most BRINKS / money curriors will have a device that will scan a QR and provide them with there info the need to support the machine
Silver cylinder you couldn’t identify is probably drill protection, I’m guessing it’s near the lynch pin? It also is probably lose and will rotate when pressure is applied. Ever dry to drill into a hard round surface thats free to rotate? My two cents from lock picking/destructive entry side
Do the ones you've seen in those auctions have network cards or only modem? I am avoiding the modem-only ATMs in my research at this point as they are quickly falling out of use.
Awesome talk, Roy! I had caught bits and pieces of this from you along the way and it was great to see the whole process end to end. Very clearly laid out too.
LOL this exact atm is being used in NZ at a local gas station of mine, i asked the owner if i could demonstrate something, enter clear cancel 1,2,3 should of seen him feak out , question is should i direct him to your video? as i use this atm twice a week (rural area) and they charge 3.50$ in fee for every withdrawl , someone is making ALOT of money here!
Summery: pick top lock, access safe close wires, false safe open signal, reboot to reset master password. And drill a hole behind keypad, see the lock to rev engineer, drill to access motor power wire, provide power to bypass lock. Not sure why both steps are needed
I think only the second step was needed to get access to the money, but he wanted a fully functioning ATM so the first step was needed to get the software part running.
This is an interesting business model….. step 1. Buy ATMs (locked, obviously) Step 2. Make the tool.. step 3. ??? Step 4. Profit? Step 5. Sell the empty ATM as used, presumably with more information than the original auction, with the master password, unlocked doors and such meaning it will reasonably go for as much if not more than you paid for it.. so if there’s no cash, then you’re compensated for your time by the increase in sale price (assuming a $1,000-ish markup pre-fees), and if there is cash, then, well.. it just might be enough to pay for the research project, and the ATM, “and then some” - which I feel like means it was easily in the 4 figure amount more than the project and ATM, especially based on that photo - which I didn’t pause to count, but I know is more than 50 notes, so yeah.. Obviously there is no free lunch and this is a job that includes work, transportation, time, money, etc. just like any other reselling side hustle would, it’s just interesting that it comes with a ‘free’ lottery ticket built in.
That sounds like an ATM refubishment company. I'm sure they exist. If you wanted to get serious about it, you'd rent them to locations, get the $3.5 per transaction and an amount per day for the machine.
Always interesting to see how people find ways onto things, but these kinds of attacks aren’t practical enough to warrant any extra protections. That’s why the company didn’t respond. You can buy an upgraded safe that makes this even harder, but most don’t even do that. The level of protection here is to stop smash and grab and it’s successful at that. Hours of drilling and wire tapping isn’t going to go unnoticed, so it’s just not worth protecting against.
3:34 The legend that is Barnaby Jack. The man how once hacked an atm in (i think it was) Dubai that dispensed gold bars and almost walked away with a million dollors. He is missed.
Oh, he’s the guy that inspired me to find a slew of ATM machine manuals online. You used to be able to get into those machines using the default password listed in the manuals, potentially changing the value of certain bills so that the machine thought it was spitting out $5s when it was actually spitting out $20s...
The problem is that if you do anything like that in the Middle East, you'll be left for dead in the desert (after being tortured to the point that you wish you were already dead) if caught.
Did you check the continuity between the black wire and the metal of the chassis? If one of those wires is a chassis ground then you only have to attach to the one wire inside the atm and anywhere on the exterior meaning you really won’t need to drill out that hole larger.
Interesting theory Chad. I have just acquired another ATM (this time for $185), same situation (No Key etc.) I am taking this opportunity to attempt this hack without making the hole larger. Stay tuned for chapter 2. :-)
Very interesting idea! I think that could potentially fry other electronics inside, but I can also imagine someone who doesn't *own* the ATM they're attacking may not care about that damage 😅
Unfortunately, my research and discussions with the lock and ATM manufacturers proved the opposite. The ATM CPU password reset procedure is as presented in this talk. The lock has no reset procedure, but there is a tool called a "Little Black Box" that in theory can deduce the lock combo. The device is only sold to law enforcement and certified locksmiths. If you are able to present evidence to support your theory, I would love to discuss it.
What you saw was the reset procedure for the administrative password. Which won't give you any access to the money. Also the process of resetting the password wipes the encryption keys which are stored in the keypad. Other things that also wipe encryption keys are opening the keypad, tilting the ATM more than 30°, or changing the denomination of the bills in the cassette. Encryption keys are a 128-bit hexadecimal number. They are supposed to be destroyed after being entered into the ATM. You can test dispense the bills, however those bills go into the reject bin of the dispenser. Which is locked in the safe. As for the lock for the save there's no way to open it without brute forcing the lock itself. Which is what the little black box does. The ATM is also supposedly bolted to the ground with four bolts on the bottom of the safe.
I’m at 17:20. Those safe pads are garbage and can be affected by a strong magnet. They had to replace the metal solenoids with plastic ones because of this… 9/10 times, they aren’t replaced because they went out before the flaw was discovered. If an operator isn’t changing windows xp or ce to something more secure, they’re not changing out a solenoid pin
Thanks for this comment!! I am intrigued by your theory. I tried placing the electromagnetic drill press in several locations around the vault door without success. Can you DM or email me with details of this attack vector? I'd like to research it more.
@@WhiteFedoraMN awesome! Thanks I would really like to know the outcome. Please remember, you have to put it over the solenoid area and twist it so that it moves the solenoid. If that doesn’t work, try moving it side to side. Depending on placement (slide to the left and try to open, slide to the right and try to open). The movement of the magnet is what moves the pin inside the solenoid.
I’m thinking just from opening the top of the ATM exposing the card reader someone could easily install a skimmer am I right or am I right?! Never mind my name 😅🤣
Nifty ! A talk with any service technician from an ATM vending co. could have probably saved you time. I thought about getting into ATMs after COCOT payphones died.
I manage to hack payphone back in the day wit a captain crunch cereal whistle.then I learn how the machine works .i use a dime a string n duck tape.u have to be precise on the mearsurement or it will not work..now theres 2 payphone style..1 change comes out the left n 2 change comes out the right..use the left one .right is lol fishy ..now we have free phones...
The "silver bar" is a hardened steel pin, it is there to deflect a drill attack on the known most vulnerable parts of the lock. This is an interesting video but, if you are dragging a 40 lb magnetic drill to open the door, why not just attack the physical mechanism? No wire probing is required.
So after you changed the pass code did the qr change and once you update the firmware and run diag mode I'm guessing you can 'test' the note dispenser... multiple times..??😊
I saws all with long blade spud of cut those floor bolts. Just saying. The long blades bend like paper and would of gone right under it and cut them bolts 🤩👍
I was thinking anti-drill, but when I put one of the locks under a drill press and set the bit directly next to the dowel, the bit tore through the dowel no problem. Hmmm...
Ya, what is really too bad is that I had to turn in this video 3 weeks before DEF CON. If you had been at the live talk you would have seen an additional attack that didn't require drilling etc. "Patch 'n Sniff" :-)
Pretty sure you don't need two pins you just need to go to hot. The motor should run to ground. I never run to - when troubleshooting I always go ground. But I'm also troubleshooting with power supplies not batteries.
I just tried this on my bench. I attached + to the white wire only and touched the - lead to the lock body. No go. The small DC motor that moves the lock pin isn't grounded to the lock body.
@@WhiteFedoraMN One thing that could seriously improve the design is if both of those leads were shorted by a MOSFET when driving voltage isn't being applied. That would then necessitate physically cutting one of the wires which would vastly increase the chances of a irrevocable mistake.
This is similar to what the folks did to rip off slot machines years ago. Nothing really spectacular but all in all, anything a human being can create can be hacked. It's as simple as that.
Props to him for taking the time to do the research and share it though. He did this talk at DEFCON live and the room was packed. There was some content in the live preso that isn't in this pre-recorded version. I think DEFCON had all presenters do a video that year cuz of covid.
But Soon ........... Bitcoin - the new bank heists are not of the cash grab sort as much now, nor into the future. 600 million - no here have it back i was only joking .
Is this above the skillset of a common thief? I think so. Are the 'security' protocols around the two main bypass pins robust? Hardly. Like elevators, ATMs are meant to be opened up and operated by authorised personnel. Are there enough hurdles that the common thief will not find this? Likely (at least R&D limits this how easy the access is). A tangent: as an ATM owner, are you responsible for the cash or does the ATM manufacture take some liability? That they would pay out for up to X usd if this machine was covertly breached? (which I assume would be a hard legal fight). (My guess and concern almost is that these machines are all on the owner and the establishment would be fully liable. Kind of like how casinos had bad slot machines for decades - bad at not triggering the jack pot (if you knew how to trigger it)).
just surprised... a windows ce machine and you cannot fid the code :) then brute force arduino on the keypad generating codes... :( alot of other stuff to play with instead of drilling ...
I hate to admit this but I will say in my defense I was tired when I was watching this. At one point I thought to myself, why not just put your card in and withdraw the money the normal way to get it out? lmao
@David Reads Yes, but your comment is completely irrelevant when the context of both my comment and the comment I was replying to was on the subject of a machine that exchanges government issued currency....
Maybe cops and/or the FBI can now be on the lookout for this type of exploit?? Maybe somewhere there is a "All the $$ disappeared from this ATM without damage" cold case file?
16:12 in the UK we had a spate of people filling the cash machines with propane and blowing them open that way, they started fitting gas sniffer devices (similar to those fitted to forklifts in enclosed spaces) that engage some sort of defence not sure what, be it the release of some sort of gas suppression like an inert gas, or just an alarm to a control centre.
Love this. Been in payments and construction of payment gateways and protocols for 20+ years. Well done sir.
Thank you for watching and the kind works Rico !!
Did you know: Nautilus Hyosung ATMs have "Stop attacking immediately" screen. Supposedly it is activated when the shock sensor or tamper switches are being activated. Found this out through the update files.
the QR is for the teck/admin to pull up password records thats is your serial number of the system board.
most BRINKS / money curriors will have a device that will scan a QR and provide them with there info the need to support the machine
Ahhhh. Thank you for filling that knowledge gap for me Bradley!!
Wow wow wow! What an out of the box type of thinking when approaching the problem. Bravo maestro!
Silver cylinder you couldn’t identify is probably drill protection, I’m guessing it’s near the lynch pin? It also is probably lose and will rotate when pressure is applied. Ever dry to drill into a hard round surface thats free to rotate?
My two cents from lock picking/destructive entry side
I've seen these go for under $50 in bankruptcy auctions. Guess I will be buying one soon.
Do the ones you've seen in those auctions have network cards or only modem? I am avoiding the modem-only ATMs in my research at this point as they are quickly falling out of use.
You know he knows his stuff because he never said 'ATM Machine'.
lol. Thanks for watching!!
The auction listing did, however, which I'm sure you noticed.
I love chai tea
Automatic teller machine machine
11:44, did say “local LAN” though. :)
Awesome talk, Roy! I had caught bits and pieces of this from you along the way and it was great to see the whole process end to end. Very clearly laid out too.
Thank you Gerben!
who else is looking for atm's to buy now that roy made profit? ^^
Too bad the country I live in only has two companies who have ATM - and they aren't getting foreclosed lol.
,come to my there atm every where gas station banks supermarket s
LOL this exact atm is being used in NZ at a local gas station of mine, i asked the owner if i could demonstrate something, enter clear cancel 1,2,3 should of seen him feak out , question is should i direct him to your video? as i use this atm twice a week (rural area) and they charge 3.50$ in fee for every withdrawl , someone is making ALOT of money here!
Summery: pick top lock, access safe close wires, false safe open signal, reboot to reset master password. And drill a hole behind keypad, see the lock to rev engineer, drill to access motor power wire, provide power to bypass lock. Not sure why both steps are needed
I think only the second step was needed to get access to the money, but he wanted a fully functioning ATM so the first step was needed to get the software part running.
@@robhulluk Exactly !!
Thanks for watching and the great summary Leo !!
This is an interesting business model…..
step 1. Buy ATMs (locked, obviously)
Step 2. Make the tool..
step 3. ???
Step 4. Profit?
Step 5. Sell the empty ATM as used, presumably with more information than the original auction, with the master password, unlocked doors and such meaning it will reasonably go for as much if not more than you paid for it.. so if there’s no cash, then you’re compensated for your time by the increase in sale price (assuming a $1,000-ish markup pre-fees), and if there is cash, then, well.. it just might be enough to pay for the research project, and the ATM, “and then some” - which I feel like means it was easily in the 4 figure amount more than the project and ATM, especially based on that photo - which I didn’t pause to count, but I know is more than 50 notes, so yeah..
Obviously there is no free lunch and this is a job that includes work, transportation, time, money, etc. just like any other reselling side hustle would, it’s just interesting that it comes with a ‘free’ lottery ticket built in.
That sounds like an ATM refubishment company. I'm sure they exist. If you wanted to get serious about it, you'd rent them to locations, get the $3.5 per transaction and an amount per day for the machine.
Always interesting to see how people find ways onto things, but these kinds of attacks aren’t practical enough to warrant any extra protections. That’s why the company didn’t respond. You can buy an upgraded safe that makes this even harder, but most don’t even do that. The level of protection here is to stop smash and grab and it’s successful at that. Hours of drilling and wire tapping isn’t going to go unnoticed, so it’s just not worth protecting against.
3:34 The legend that is Barnaby Jack. The man how once hacked an atm in (i think it was) Dubai that dispensed gold bars and almost walked away with a million dollors.
He is missed.
Oh, he’s the guy that inspired me to find a slew of ATM machine manuals online. You used to be able to get into those machines using the default password listed in the manuals, potentially changing the value of certain bills so that the machine thought it was spitting out $5s when it was actually spitting out $20s...
The problem is that if you do anything like that in the Middle East, you'll be left for dead in the desert (after being tortured to the point that you wish you were already dead) if caught.
I think I saw a talk with a slide or two about it. They roped off that ATM until he left the building, marked it CLOSED.
Could you use a strong electromagnet to push/pull the linch pin? Or a rotating field to drive the motor externally?
I'm guessing no, as the lock body is likely steel or something else that would be susceptible to a magnetic field
@@jon87386 bingo
No. But I mean, all you need is a the lock pick tool, and the wire probe to break in. Seems pretty easy already. It's crazy
Great talk Roy - thanks for sharing the journey!
Thank you for the kind words and for watching!!
Did you check the continuity between the black wire and the metal of the chassis? If one of those wires is a chassis ground then you only have to attach to the one wire inside the atm and anywhere on the exterior meaning you really won’t need to drill out that hole larger.
Interesting theory Chad. I have just acquired another ATM (this time for $185), same situation (No Key etc.) I am taking this opportunity to attempt this hack without making the hole larger. Stay tuned for chapter 2. :-)
As I replied in another similar comment, I just tried this. The DC motor is not grounded to the lock chasis.
Haha ... "it takes around 40 minutes for a novice jackhammer user to get it unbolted from the floor" ... or something around that .... classic!
The vault lock still did the job it was designed to do.
Absolutely Capital. Nice to get your research paid for too 😋
Thanks Johnny!!
10:12 I like the confidence 😄
You are an incredible human.
hah, dunno about that, but thanks!
So sad I've missed 3 years of defcon
I wonder if you could use electrical induction to power the DC motor from outside the safe without contacting any wires
Very interesting idea! I think that could potentially fry other electronics inside, but I can also imagine someone who doesn't *own* the ATM they're attacking may not care about that damage 😅
Very interesting and great work.
As an ATM owner, I got more motivation to buy more machines from the first 2 minutes.
Is it a good business to be in? I've been curious about it a long time. What's the future though with digital currency?
Really awesome talk. Enjoyed it alot. My favourite talk of defcon 29
Thank you Andi. Were you able to make it to the live version in Vegas?
@@WhiteFedoraMN unfortunately not as I'm in the UK. But watched it online and recommended it to friends. 👏 Hopefully I'll be back next year
@@AndiPannell Awesome! I plan to have a talk with all new ATM research ready for DC30.
The people at the help desk always have a reset and recovery procedure. I feel like social engineering the help desk would be easier than all of this.
Unfortunately, my research and discussions with the lock and ATM manufacturers proved the opposite. The ATM CPU password reset procedure is as presented in this talk. The lock has no reset procedure, but there is a tool called a "Little Black Box" that in theory can deduce the lock combo. The device is only sold to law enforcement and certified locksmiths. If you are able to present evidence to support your theory, I would love to discuss it.
What you saw was the reset procedure for the administrative password. Which won't give you any access to the money. Also the process of resetting the password wipes the encryption keys which are stored in the keypad. Other things that also wipe encryption keys are opening the keypad, tilting the ATM more than 30°, or changing the denomination of the bills in the cassette.
Encryption keys are a 128-bit hexadecimal number. They are supposed to be destroyed after being entered into the ATM.
You can test dispense the bills, however those bills go into the reject bin of the dispenser. Which is locked in the safe.
As for the lock for the save there's no way to open it without brute forcing the lock itself. Which is what the little black box does.
The ATM is also supposedly bolted to the ground with four bolts on the bottom of the safe.
Looks like about $3360 from here. That's quite a score!
Great informative video! Thanks for sharing.
Thanks Mike !
Thanks for sharing, great talk 👍
I’m at 17:20. Those safe pads are garbage and can be affected by a strong magnet. They had to replace the metal solenoids with plastic ones because of this… 9/10 times, they aren’t replaced because they went out before the flaw was discovered. If an operator isn’t changing windows xp or ce to something more secure, they’re not changing out a solenoid pin
Thanks for this comment!! I am intrigued by your theory. I tried placing the electromagnetic drill press in several locations around the vault door without success. Can you DM or email me with details of this attack vector? I'd like to research it more.
@@WhiteFedoraMN sorry for the late reply… haven’t been on here much. Here is a demo. Good luck
ruclips.net/video/ApJQ2wcYjBo/видео.html
@@Uneke - Thanks! I just saw this and have ordered the same rare earth magnet shown in that video. I will try it out and let you know how it goes!
@@WhiteFedoraMN awesome! Thanks I would really like to know the outcome.
Please remember, you have to put it over the solenoid area and twist it so that it moves the solenoid. If that doesn’t work, try moving it side to side. Depending on placement (slide to the left and try to open, slide to the right and try to open). The movement of the magnet is what moves the pin inside the solenoid.
That was so badass. I love smart people.
I’m thinking just from opening the top of the ATM exposing the card reader someone could easily install a skimmer am I right or am I right?! Never mind my name 😅🤣
Nifty ! A talk with any service technician from an ATM vending co. could have probably saved you time. I thought about getting into ATMs after COCOT payphones died.
I manage to hack payphone back in the day wit a captain crunch cereal whistle.then I learn how the machine works .i use a dime a string n duck tape.u have to be precise on the mearsurement or it will not work..now theres 2 payphone style..1 change comes out the left n 2 change comes out the right..use the left one .right is lol fishy ..now we have free phones...
Great talk very insightful!
dude is so elite
heheh... just doing my thing !!
Damn I kinda want to find ATMs from foreclosures now lmao
The "silver bar" is a hardened steel pin, it is there to deflect a drill attack on the known most vulnerable parts of the lock. This is an interesting video but, if you are dragging a 40 lb magnetic drill to open the door, why not just attack the physical mechanism? No wire probing is required.
So after you changed the pass code did the qr change and once you update the firmware and run diag mode I'm guessing you can 'test' the note dispenser... multiple times..??😊
That was most excellent!
is the lock cast aluminum? maybe gallium on the lock body?
Great question Tyler. I just measured the resistance across the lock body and it is negligible.
Very informative….. please get a flipper zero and rfid Wi-Fi fun
They're going cashless for the last 2 years. And about to go hot. Sept 31st in parts of the world, no more 10's and up, no bank tellers, etc.
loved the video ! thx
46:17 Money Shot
just like that scene in die hard
I saws all with long blade spud of cut those floor bolts. Just saying. The long blades bend like paper and would of gone right under it and cut them bolts 🤩👍
I think all the tools and equipment you have is worth more than the ATM
That seems surpisingly easy.
The silver dowel - anti-drill, or anti-tilt?
I was thinking anti-drill, but when I put one of the locks under a drill press and set the bit directly next to the dowel, the bit tore through the dowel no problem. Hmmm...
Kinda disappointed that the solution was drill the lock + manipulate
Ya, what is really too bad is that I had to turn in this video 3 weeks before DEF CON. If you had been at the live talk you would have seen an additional attack that didn't require drilling etc. "Patch 'n Sniff" :-)
@@WhiteFedoraMN if you have an extra video I'll watch it!
Packet snnifignn
Pretty sure you don't need two pins you just need to go to hot. The motor should run to ground. I never run to - when troubleshooting I always go ground. But I'm also troubleshooting with power supplies not batteries.
I just tried this on my bench. I attached + to the white wire only and touched the - lead to the lock body. No go. The small DC motor that moves the lock pin isn't grounded to the lock body.
@@WhiteFedoraMN One thing that could seriously improve the design is if both of those leads were shorted by a MOSFET when driving voltage isn't being applied. That would then necessitate physically cutting one of the wires which would vastly increase the chances of a irrevocable mistake.
Conclusion it's worth buying a second hand ATM.
I accept this videos are interesting but who else feels sleepy when watching , is it only me or others are there .
lol, lots of defcon talks are like that. It's about the learning, not the entertainment.
I hear they're using this as the plot for Ocean's 14
hahahha, thanks Joe! If anyone ever wants to use this hack in a movie I will gladly consult :-)
This is similar to what the folks did to rip off slot machines years ago. Nothing really spectacular but all in all, anything a human being can create can be hacked. It's as simple as that.
Props to him for taking the time to do the research and share it though. He did this talk at DEFCON live and the room was packed. There was some content in the live preso that isn't in this pre-recorded version. I think DEFCON had all presenters do a video that year cuz of covid.
Yet loser make it all shady and scary and STUPID with all the videos around instead of something cool
But Soon ........... Bitcoin - the new bank heists are not of the cash grab sort as much now, nor into the future. 600 million - no here have it back i was only joking .
That was not Dickeys branding, maybe copyright issues?
QR code starts with HY, probably manufacturers serial number.
Love ATM talks lol
Thanks for watching Weston!
@@WhiteFedoraMN Very welcome great job on research
Play Doom on it
1969 is that i was informed
Is this above the skillset of a common thief? I think so. Are the 'security' protocols around the two main bypass pins robust? Hardly.
Like elevators, ATMs are meant to be opened up and operated by authorised personnel. Are there enough hurdles that the common thief will not find this? Likely (at least R&D limits this how easy the access is).
A tangent: as an ATM owner, are you responsible for the cash or does the ATM manufacture take some liability? That they would pay out for up to X usd if this machine was covertly breached? (which I assume would be a hard legal fight). (My guess and concern almost is that these machines are all on the owner and the establishment would be fully liable. Kind of like how casinos had bad slot machines for decades - bad at not triggering the jack pot (if you knew how to trigger it)).
The screw hole is an 8/32 not 1/4”
Nope, wrong. The true diameter is 16/64th. Precision is required.
10:48 gold moment
:-)
just surprised... a windows ce machine and you cannot fid the code :) then brute force arduino on the keypad generating codes... :( alot of other stuff to play with instead of drilling ...
I hate to admit this but I will say in my defense I was tired when I was watching this. At one point I thought to myself, why not just put your card in and withdraw the money the normal way to get it out? lmao
Especially when you can use any card, not just your own ;)
Occam's razor has entered the chat, but his way was a lot more fun to watch :-)
@@TomJones-wi4nh Thanks for watching!
Yeah but can it play Crysis?
Why so needlessly coy about the dollar amount found inside the ATM?
Taxes.
Brb, looking for businesses selling their ATMs
"in my opinion, cash is not going anywhere."
*Laughs in one world government*
@David Reads Yes, but your comment is completely irrelevant when the context of both my comment and the comment I was replying to was on the subject of a machine that exchanges government issued currency....
Can't tell if dog whistle or just joke. Although that's the point of a good dog whistle I guess
I just meant that cash still provides anonymity for the user (to some degree).
Interesting talk. Work on your UMs ;-)
Don't tell anyone that the cameras detect skin tone.
Not sure I understand this comment.
Were there any cameras on this? I dont recall him mentioning a camera
@@mandc20022 nope, no camera, but it is my ATM so it didn't really matter.
@@WhiteFedoraMN I knew it was your ATM I was just wondering if it had a camera in it, but tha k you for clearing that up for me
seems like everyone is afraid of the technocracy atm...
Hi fbi
Maybe cops and/or the FBI can now be on the lookout for this type of exploit?? Maybe somewhere there is a "All the $$ disappeared from this ATM without damage" cold case file?
It's not a game.
Not sure I understand this comment.
Really interesting video but this guy smacks his lips way too loud and often damn
gosh, sorry for that.