pastaj36 9 hours ago

Tough spot with community that expects firmware updates while hardware sells only once

  • EricBetts 5 hours ago

    It's sort of a self imposed problem as well because the community produces a bunch of pull requests, but only the corporate staff members can approve and merge them into the official firmware. It begs the question why have an official firmware if it's not at least slightly maintained.

    • godelski 1 hour ago
        > why have an official firmware if it's not at least slightly maintained.
      

      Because it's still useful to have a blessed child so that people getting into the space have somewhere to start. You could accept zero additional PRs and it would still be a useful thing to have.

      The hardware is static so the rate of software rot is pretty low. It can effectively not be maintained as long as it's already in a stable state. Adding new features is cool and all but it also adds more bugs.

      But the great thing is that there's a community, all using the same hardware, and people can fork. So people can still get those updates that they want. Maybe the only thing to do is create a community fork that is much more open but doesn't come with the same stability promises. But that can still be a lot of work, even if you get community maintainers

  • miki123211 4 hours ago

    Which is just another way of saying "this is why most developers prefer subscriptions over one-time sales"

    • abcd_f 2 hours ago

      Yeah, they do, but an actually fair to all sides model is that of one-time sales coupled with optional paid-for updates.

      • vineyardmike 2 hours ago

        That's basically a variant of a subscription, but one where the end user churns aggressively.

        It's worse in many ways too - it's a lot harder to gauge interest as the developer to understand how well any update will sell, and if the updates "stack", then a user only pays for the newest update to get all older features free. It's also worse from a cashflow perspective for the developer (but better for consumer) since they have to pre-build the update before any chance of getting paid for it.

        • jpfromlondon 1 hour ago

          I'd be surprised if the churn was as high as the subscription model.

          If I buy a product and like it as-is then I don't necessarily want it to change over time.

          Buy once is better, buy once with optional updates or periodic version releases is better still.

        • abcd_f 1 hour ago

          The principal difference is that things keep working if I stop paying. All other aspects are secondary.

          And generally speaking there is a lot of options that are excellent for developers but complete shit for the users. That's obvious, but it's also off the point in the context of fairness.

    • wongarsu 1 hour ago

      What's funny, or maybe sad, is that this used to be a solved problem back in the CD-distribution era of software. You buy the software once (or in this case the hardware that comes with a software license). You get bugfix patches and minor updates for a year. Next year the next version releases with major new features, and you either pay the price of an update or you stay on the version you are on. Good incentives for all sides. Development stays aligned with existing users, because otherwise they just stop buying updates. And in return the developer gets predictable revenue.

      Then Minecraft pioneered the model of users paying once and getting free lifetime updates. And shortly thereafter various SaaS pioneered the model of the user paying monthly while the software barely changes.

      And somehow we pretend like those two business models aren't both broken, and like the first one somehow doesn't work anymore

      • hypfer 1 hour ago

        Are you sure that minecraft pioneered that model?

        It is certainly a very well-known instance of it, but pioneered?

        • wongarsu 31 minutes ago

          Maybe popularized is the better word. It probably wasn't the first software ever to do this; free lifetime updates became viable with the internet sometime in the nineties and Minecraft only started doing it in 2009. But at the risk of being proven wrong I'm willing to claim Minecraft was the first software to do this and go mainstream, being recognizable outside its niche

      • AJRF 31 minutes ago

        I don't remember minecraft being a driver of this - I do remember Patio11 on here being very influential in start ups doing subscription software instead of "finished" desktop applications.

        That is not to blame him, but I remember his writing being very influential with start up founders.

  • underdeserver 3 hours ago

    Easy fix: Allow donations, merge updates once donation pool is enough to pay for the maintainers' time.

    • rasz 1 hour ago

      Donating to a russian company with all the sanctions in place?

      • guenthert 29 minutes ago

        What makes it a Russian company? The team is allegedly spread across the globe, the company (Flipper Devices Inc.) is registered in DE, USA and there's a London office.

    • itake 9 minutes ago

      has that ever worked, ever?

      I've heard people talk about this "solution" for over a decade, especially with crypto trying to justify itself, but I've never seen it successful.

AJRF 29 minutes ago

Everyone I know who owns a flipper almost immediately installs some 3rd party firmware like Momentum on it.

stevage 11 hours ago

It's slightly funny that the post says firmly that they aren't doing any form of real time engagement with the community anymore, then ends by announcing an AMA date and time.

egorfine 1 hour ago

I wonder whether that future includes sending me the device I initially backed on the very first kickstarter. It's been >4 years of back-and-forth with support.

rickdeckard 38 minutes ago

Might be an unpopular opinion, but:

1. They open sourced the entire Software under GPL from the start, and always pushed all their changes to that public github.

2. They supported the first-party firmware for years, including huge rewrites of the interfaces used by applications, etc.

3. They actively involved the community on many topics around the product and were always responsive.

They did their job very well, financed ONLY by one-time sales of hardware. NO subscription or additional licensing fees were ever charged.

There is still alot of potential in the hardware itself (e.g. Bluetooth/BLE, NFC Tag writing,...), and the Community is working on alot of different topics.

Tl;DR: The Flipper team is free to go and invest resources elsewhere now. Thanks for your support, keep up the great work!

yjftsjthsd-h 14 hours ago

> TL;DR: We've allocated resources to maintain Flipper Zero firmware and support community contributions.

Is that the tldr? It sure sounds like it's still on minimal life support.

  • hdgr 14 hours ago

    It is. As the article says, all development goals for FZ had been achieved and even overachieved - providing solid and feature-rich firmware, powerful SDK and developer tools. With that and development shift towards new products, updates to core firmare became infrequent - and we tried to address that.

    Src: I'm one of the developers behind Flipper Zero.

    • throwing_away 1 hour ago

      You guys have done such a good job that I've thought about buying one even though I don't need one at all just to support the project.

      You've surely launched a generation of perhaps-someday-responsible hackers into the world.

  • jagged-chisel 13 hours ago

    Why can't something be "done"?

    • busymom0 13 hours ago

      Was just reading something along those lines:

      https://infosec.exchange/@millie/115719943870742405

      > We need to normalize declaring software as finished. Not everything needs continuous updates to function. In fact, a minority of software needs this. Most software works as it is written. The code does not run out of date. I want more projects that are actually just finished, without the need to be continuously mutated and complexified ad infinitum.

      • godelski 5 hours ago

        To be fair, some software does rot. But when you have control of the hardware and the software, rot is pretty uncommon.

        Honestly, I thought the whole point was to make a popular unified platform where the community could come together and expand on it. I really can't imagine a centralized player can predict nor create all features that users might want. But it seems like Flipper did the right thing: make the software flexible and easy to expand upon.

    • bigiain 11 hours ago

      Especially since, as that article describes, the "firmware" has a much more limited scope that it used to, now being mostly a loader for app rather that providing user functions.

      Worrying about firmware development resources for a Flipper Zero seems a bit like concentrating on your bios instead of ongoing updates to Linux and the applications you use. Yeah, it's important, but it's probably exceedingly rare for the firmware here to need to change much.

    • hypfer 1 hour ago

      That's because we haven't yet started to laugh people out of the room that get uneasy and complain when the rate of updates of something starts slowing down.

  • ActorNightly 10 hours ago

    Why would you need any support for things that are fully open source and flashable yourself?

    Most everyone who has a flipper runs something like Unleashed firmware, and most of the functionality is in the apps that people built, not in the actual firmware.

asasidh 2 hours ago

Why would they not consider open-sourcing the software side ? Its not like they make any money from the software.

  • swiftcoder 1 hour ago

    > Why would they not consider open-sourcing the software side ?

    What part of their GPL-licensed firmware that is hosted in a public GitHub, do you consider not to be open-source?

natbennett 15 hours ago

Flipper Zero is one of the handiest little pieces of tech I’ve ever owned. Being able to copy RFID keys is occasionally fantastically useful.

  • mikepurvis 13 hours ago

    Is... that possible? I thought the whole point is that those were a challenge-response specifically to avoid ever them disclosing over the air the material necessary to impersonate one.

    • givc 13 hours ago

      I don’t know a whole lot about RFID, but some of the most basic cards can be copied very easily. When scanned, the reader always reads the same bits.

      I believe there are some more secure cards, like Mifare DESFire EV3 that do provide some security. You’d be shocked how insecure most RFID readers for security cards are.

    • p_l 13 hours ago

      RFID keys vary from utterly dumb ID-based, to hackable challenge-response, to actual NFC smartcard (very rare).

      Some of that can be trivially cloned.

    • fragmede 13 hours ago

      Depends on where you are. Newer systems are resistant to attack, but not everywhere has upgraded to newer systems.

    • jchulce 13 hours ago

      Keyfobs absolutely should use a secure challenge-response protocol in order to prevent cloning. Unfortunately, it's extremely common for RFID devices to simply use the tag ID which is trivially cloneable. Many of the systems that make some attempt at security still fail by using a broken protocol or a flawed implementation.

    • natbennett 13 hours ago

      Oh yeah that’s how you’re supposed to do it. But it’s entirely possible to set up a system that uses RFID key fobs that uh, doesn’t.

      In the case where it was most useful to make copies they did eventually replace the system with one where the keys weren’t copy able. Which was better!

    • GuB-42 12 hours ago

      Some cards don't have any form of security. For example Konami "e-amusement" cards are just an ID number, which is also written on the back of the card. It is a username so to speak, the password is the PIN you enter when you start the game.

      Some cards use some kind of challenge-response but are weak and are easily crackable.

      Some cards have an anti-copy protection based on rolling codes, be careful with these. The idea is that when you use it to, say, open a door, the card sends a code to the reader and if correct, that code is burned and the reader replies with the next code, which is stored in the card for the next time, making every other copy (possibly including the original) unusable. If the card emulator doesn't store the rolling code, you are completely locked out.

      Some cards have a proper challenge-response mechanism that works and can't be easily copied.

    • Rebelgecko 11 hours ago

      Many RFID cards are literally just an ID number, and will happily allow you to copy that number to your own RFID card (look up "blue cloner guns", although they have their own downsides). Basically just security through obscurity. Cards that do fancy crypto stuff exist, but odds are your workplace badge, apartment fob, or hotel room key is the simple kind (because those are cheaper)

    • Larrikin 11 hours ago

      In my old apartment I was able to copy my fob from my apartment office. In my new one I had to record the interaction with the door and was then able to open the door

    • Aachen 10 hours ago

      You're thinking of NFC, not RFID, and with NFC the owner might not have changed the default keys.

      It's a common mix-up (people barely differentiate between the terms anymore, though I'm surprised nobody in 2 hours mentioned it yet), basically RFID is (historically) an ID; a username. Like an ID field in a database. NFC is near-field communication: bidirectional. It does challenge-response and typically runs on hardened chips. But yeah people will call NFC chips RFID and RFID chips NFC all the time. Both are waterproof devices doing radio transmissions on wireless power and you can't tell them apart without using some equipment to try and read the chip type (even if most phones can do that nowadays), so I can understand the terminology generalisation

    • DaSHacka 10 hours ago

      Even that process can be flawed, see: Crypto1 and all the shenanigans that followed.

      Recent UL-C/AES disclosure too IIRC

    • miladyincontrol 2 hours ago

      As others have said, most are dumb, some just slightly less so. A few captured nonce values and a dictionary attack will crack most with ease.

  • gonzalohm 13 hours ago

    Is this something you do often? I could see a few use cases and also for copying garage keys. But I don't think I would use it enough to justify the investment

    • gopalv 13 hours ago

      > I don't think I would use it enough to justify the investment

      This is not a rational purchase - most of the rule breaking done with the zero is for fun or convenience, rather than being truly illegal.

      It used to be more fun before the hotels started handing out NFC unlocks with your phone.

      Still, being able to send each other a key for a hotel room on Signal is a nice trick if you are traveling with a sufficiently tech savvy group of people.

    • natbennett 13 hours ago

      Nope! Only occasionally. But it’s handy on those occasions.

    • HDBaseT 12 hours ago

      You can't even clone you garage door opener key anyway.

      Flipper Zero and its clones have always been pseudohacker nonsense. Fun little party trick I suppose.

      • EricBetts 5 hours ago

        Sometimes you can clone them. My 20+ year-old condo uses non-rolling code "MegaCode". It's hit or miss.

    • dzhiurgis 37 minutes ago

      IMO for garage much easier to just add garage door opener that works from your phone.

  • pornel 8 hours ago

    I use it to clone remotes of "dumb" devices and emulate them with ESPHome to make them "smart" fully offline under my control.

    • dzhiurgis 40 minutes ago

      Can you outline the process here? What transmitters do you use with esp32?

drunken_thor 14 hours ago

What a great tool and community they have built. I find my flipper0 is like a computer Swiss Army knife. It’s so fun to carry around a tool of my own trade.

ughitsaaron 13 hours ago

I get ads for this all the time but still have no idea what I could do with it.

  • devmor 13 hours ago

    Anything you might want to do with a radio or IR device but don’t have specialized hardware for. It’s kind of a swiss knife/leatherman tool for short range communications standards.

    • Gigachad 10 hours ago

      I think of it as the browser dev tools of radio. Most people will have no use for it but it brings visibility and interactability in to an otherwise invisible world.

  • quietsegfault 11 hours ago

    I use mine mostly as a universal IR remote.

    • nicman23 4 hours ago

      i vibed a .ir to tasmota IRSend commands and it is so good.

      • avipars 2 hours ago

        Can you open source it?

  • DaSHacka 10 hours ago

    Logical NAND of a laptop featureset. Has things like IR, a subghz HDR, NFC+RFID, USB device support, iButton, and the like.

    Some people get a lot of use out of it, but if you just saw that list of hardware and couldn't think of one area you'd apply it in, it's probably not going to be a useful device for you.

nekusar 13 hours ago

[flagged]

  • rufo 13 hours ago

    Given they’ve had several skirmishes with customs and law enforcement agencies around the world, this always struck me as similar to the “don’t talk about installing retail Switch games on the Switch modding Discord” type of deal - everyone knows you can do that, but allowing mentions in official channels opens us to liability and causes nothing but headaches for both us and for customers, so if you’re going to do that, you need to talk about it somewhere else. I freely admit that’s an assumption on my part, though, and I don’t know if there’s something uglier there…?

    • nekusar 12 hours ago

      Its one thing to have a skid come in going "I wanna hack the RFID on the gubbmints's doors how can i do that?"

      Versus "we forked the firmware to include a wide range of pentesting tools"

      And then get banned for even saying the alternate firmware.

      And seriously, this little thing is a wonderful hacker multitool. You can seriously fuck shit up with the hardware they included. For fucks sake, thats WHY they created it.

      • pocksuppet 11 hours ago

        That's how you have to be on Discord, or else your guild gets banned from Discord. I wish we weren't using this crap. On IRC, sometimes you had to deal with cranky netops, but they mostly left you alone.

      • bigiain 11 hours ago

        Any advice on good communities or sources of (reliable) information on alternative firmwares and pen testing type tools?

        • embedding-shape 10 hours ago

          IRC is still alive and there is bunch of communities around that are a bit more lax, probably because they're half-dead compared to what they used to be. Today probabably Libera.chat would be the best introduction if you haven't touched IRC before.

      • UqWBcuFx6NV4r 10 hours ago

        Absolutely nothing you said refutes anything in the comment you’re replying to. You are just reiterating “I’m angry and this is stupid”. Go write in your journal or something. It’s impossible to engage with someone who isn’t engaging themselves.

      • ButlerianJihad 10 hours ago

        “Furries Forking Flipper Firmware” sounds like a promising and/or true and/or Garden-Path headline

  • gear54rus 13 hours ago

    I can understand why that happened at least remotely. If you do all those things they refused 'officially', it might be easier for stupid government idiots to paint it as a dangerous illegal tool.

    Adding the necessary hardware while refusing to support arbitrarily iLLegAl things is the best of both worlds.

    • hdgr 13 hours ago

      This. Many legit, but questionable features blown out of proportion already caused many issues with regulators who just don't want to get into details, but just delist from sales/ban the device.

      And once you start talking about "jamming" and other 1337 h4x0r stuff - which is straight up illegal and can get you into trouble - on official platforms, don't get offended when that gets removed.

      • nekusar 12 hours ago

        Sure. I get why you don't want the skids jamming. But hell, it is still in your github commit history. Your all historical work was that of a attacking hacker toolkit. Jamming proves that.

        Now, that absolutely does NOT excuse Adkins on the discord from people asking how to get the PSK for garage door openers, and emulating the buttons. And especially since it was being asked by owners of said doors.

        But you banned people with legitimate and legal uses too.

        Good riddance to you all. I've stayed with 3rd party and steered others towards better actors than yourselves.

  • 15155 12 hours ago

    > mention ANY of the alternate firmwares on their discord, and you get banned

    Does it surprise you that a Russian product team would use these tactics?

  • arkits 12 hours ago

    are there any chinese knock offs of the hardware? i've yet to find something that integrates all the features this well

    • avipars 2 hours ago

      On aliexpress there are but I can't vouch for their quality

  • elliotec 10 hours ago

    Agreed 100% - they bricked the thing with official firmwares, and the "community" is the meanest most awful group of so-called hackers I've ever interacted with. It's more than just COA, they're actively aggressive and insular, not just on discord but reddit and less-known places too (which you can't know because you'll be banned for asking where you could find out).

  • Shorel 5 hours ago

    I would be interested in the names and descriptions of these legit pentesting tools.