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View Full Version : How To Lock Your Car


MAS Tequila
12-28-2010, 10:11 AM
Not bike related, but informative

Reposted from another forum




How to Lock Your Car and Why

I locked my car and as I walked away, I heard my car door unlock. I went back and locked my car again 3 times. I looked around and saw 2 guys
sitting in a car in the fire lane next to the store. When I looked straight at them, they did not unlock my car again.

While traveling, my son stopped at a roadside park. He came out to his car
less than 5 minutes later and found someone had gotten into his car and
stolen his cell phone, laptop computer, GPS navigator, and briefcase.
He called the police but there were no signs of his car being broken
into. The police told him that there is a device that robbers are using
now to clone your security code when you lock the doors on your car
using your key-chain locking device. They sit a distance away and watch
for their next victim. They know that you are going inside the store,
restaurant, or bathroom, and they have a few minutes to steal and run.
The police officer said that we should manually lock our car doors by
hitting the lock button inside the car. Then if there is someone
sitting in a parking lot watching for their next victim, it will not be
you. When you hit the lock button inside your car upon exiting, it does
not send the security code. If
you walk away and use the door lock on your key chain, it sends the code through the airwaves where it can
be stolen. Something totally new to us...and real.

Be aware of this and please pass this note on.
Snopes Approved. Please share with everyone you know... Good information! !!

AlabamaNomadRider
12-28-2010, 11:30 AM
Sounds like sound advice. Crooks keep getting smarter every day.

boomerang2120
12-28-2010, 11:54 AM
Don't panic - it's not going to happen - and it's NOT Snopes approved

Please checkout Snopes.com directly: http://www.snopes.com/autos/techno/lockcode.asp

While theoretically possible, (which makes for a good sounding internet based scary story) it would take a bunch of specialized equipment, a lot of technical knowledge and days or weeks for someone to break your cars randomly generated code.

So don't sweat it.

Sin City Stan
12-28-2010, 11:59 AM
Not bike related, but informative

Snopes Approved. Please share with everyone you know... Good information! !!



No, this is not Snopes approved unless you're talking about 1980s technology. See link.

http://www.snopes.com/autos/techno/lockcode.asp