Flipper Zero gained notoriety for its toy-dolphin appearance and controversial capability to clone hotel key cards, interfere with garage doors, and exploit wireless signals, prompting bans and sensational videos. The rumored Flipper One is a complete redesign by Pavel Zhovner, intended as a pocket Linux computer rather than a radio tool. The Flipper One reportedly removes RFID, NFC, sub-gigahertz, and infrared radios, focusing on a modular Linux platform with a screen to facilitate penetration testing. The design aims to avoid the regulatory problems of its predecessor while offering a flexible, extensible platform for security professionals.
The Flipper Zero became famous for two things: looking like a toy dolphin and getting banned by governments who were terrified it might unlock their cars. If you missed that particular internet drama, imagine a device that could clone your hotel key card, mess with your garage door, and generally make security professionals very nervous, all while displaying a cute pixelated dolphin on its screen.
Pavel Zhovner and the Flipper team have been pretty explicit about that. Zhovner and his team clearly paid attention to the regulatory headaches that plagued the original Flipper Zero. The rumored Flipper One ditches every single radio that made the Zero famous. No RFID, no NFC, no sub-gigahertz, no infrared. Just a Linux box with a screen and a modular design that makes pen-testing easy without pissing off entire countries.
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