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  3. I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.

I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.

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  • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

    I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.

    It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.

    If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.

    I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.

    ---

    # 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking

    ## 2 Picks

    Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.

    Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool

    ## 3 Lock Types

    Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
    Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
    Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
    Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangement

    Sketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock

    ## 4 Pins Types

    A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).

    Standard: plain cylinder
    Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
    Serrated: like standard pins, but clickier

    There are many others, but they're much rarer.

    Sketches: each of the 3 pins

    ## 5 Techniques

    Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
    Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
    Raking: generate random bitting guesses—try rising, falling, flat, and rocking motions

    Sketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions

    ## 6 Practice Locks

    Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
    Laminated Master: good until trivial
    Master 140: has spools, good until trivial

    Sketches: each of the 3 padlocks

    ## 7 Bypasses

    Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
    Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
    Shims: good for cheap padlocks

    Sketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims

    ## 8 About Alice

    Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.

    Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock

    LGBTQIA.space/@alice
    [email address]

    diverdutch@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
    diverdutch@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
    diverdutch@mastodon.social
    wrote last edited by
    #8

    @alice You missed a bit in section #8 Alice is awesome.

    alice@lgbtqia.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • diverdutch@mastodon.socialD diverdutch@mastodon.social

      @alice You missed a bit in section #8 Alice is awesome.

      alice@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
      alice@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
      alice@lgbtqia.space
      wrote last edited by
      #9

      @diverdutch I could include a couple short testimonials for good measure 😋

      diverdutch@mastodon.socialD nikkileah@mendeddrum.orgN 2 Replies Last reply
      0
      • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

        I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.

        It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.

        If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.

        I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.

        ---

        # 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking

        ## 2 Picks

        Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.

        Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool

        ## 3 Lock Types

        Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
        Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
        Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
        Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangement

        Sketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock

        ## 4 Pins Types

        A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).

        Standard: plain cylinder
        Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
        Serrated: like standard pins, but clickier

        There are many others, but they're much rarer.

        Sketches: each of the 3 pins

        ## 5 Techniques

        Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
        Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
        Raking: generate random bitting guesses—try rising, falling, flat, and rocking motions

        Sketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions

        ## 6 Practice Locks

        Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
        Laminated Master: good until trivial
        Master 140: has spools, good until trivial

        Sketches: each of the 3 padlocks

        ## 7 Bypasses

        Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
        Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
        Shims: good for cheap padlocks

        Sketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims

        ## 8 About Alice

        Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.

        Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock

        LGBTQIA.space/@alice
        [email address]

        alonely0@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
        alonely0@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
        alonely0@mastodon.social
        wrote last edited by
        #10

        @alice ngl I've opened dozens of locker locks and a few big-ish padlocks with just scissors and some bruteforce in anything in between 5 secs and a couple of minutes (I was the one to open random lockers in my HS for ppl who forgot the key when the headmaster, who had the master key, wasn't available). You can go a long way with macgyver tools in lockpicking lol. I really appreciate fedi lockpicking content!

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

          I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.

          It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.

          If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.

          I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.

          ---

          # 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking

          ## 2 Picks

          Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.

          Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool

          ## 3 Lock Types

          Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
          Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
          Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
          Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangement

          Sketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock

          ## 4 Pins Types

          A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).

          Standard: plain cylinder
          Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
          Serrated: like standard pins, but clickier

          There are many others, but they're much rarer.

          Sketches: each of the 3 pins

          ## 5 Techniques

          Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
          Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
          Raking: generate random bitting guesses—try rising, falling, flat, and rocking motions

          Sketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions

          ## 6 Practice Locks

          Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
          Laminated Master: good until trivial
          Master 140: has spools, good until trivial

          Sketches: each of the 3 padlocks

          ## 7 Bypasses

          Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
          Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
          Shims: good for cheap padlocks

          Sketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims

          ## 8 About Alice

          Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.

          Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock

          LGBTQIA.space/@alice
          [email address]

          zanagb@mastodon.socialZ This user is from outside of this forum
          zanagb@mastodon.socialZ This user is from outside of this forum
          zanagb@mastodon.social
          wrote last edited by
          #11

          @alice knowledge does not take space so having a long-form version available at some point would be nice. Noting this and the hashtag for future reference, too!

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

            @diverdutch I could include a couple short testimonials for good measure 😋

            diverdutch@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
            diverdutch@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
            diverdutch@mastodon.social
            wrote last edited by
            #12

            @alice Only apropos

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

              @diverdutch I could include a couple short testimonials for good measure 😋

              nikkileah@mendeddrum.orgN This user is from outside of this forum
              nikkileah@mendeddrum.orgN This user is from outside of this forum
              nikkileah@mendeddrum.org
              wrote last edited by
              #13

              @alice @diverdutch "Alice shares her passion clearly and makes learning fun, unlocking potential wherever she goes"

              alice@lgbtqia.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.

                It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.

                If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.

                I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.

                ---

                # 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking

                ## 2 Picks

                Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.

                Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool

                ## 3 Lock Types

                Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
                Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
                Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
                Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangement

                Sketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock

                ## 4 Pins Types

                A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).

                Standard: plain cylinder
                Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
                Serrated: like standard pins, but clickier

                There are many others, but they're much rarer.

                Sketches: each of the 3 pins

                ## 5 Techniques

                Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
                Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
                Raking: generate random bitting guesses—try rising, falling, flat, and rocking motions

                Sketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions

                ## 6 Practice Locks

                Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
                Laminated Master: good until trivial
                Master 140: has spools, good until trivial

                Sketches: each of the 3 padlocks

                ## 7 Bypasses

                Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
                Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
                Shims: good for cheap padlocks

                Sketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims

                ## 8 About Alice

                Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.

                Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock

                LGBTQIA.space/@alice
                [email address]

                sempf@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                sempf@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                sempf@infosec.exchange
                wrote last edited by
                #14

                @alice I would love to see this! An updated zine would be awesome. Have you seen Schuyler's from like 20 years ago? https://www.locksport.net/files/LSI_Guide_To_Lockpicking.pdf

                alice@lgbtqia.spaceA 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                  I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.

                  It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.

                  If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.

                  I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.

                  ---

                  # 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking

                  ## 2 Picks

                  Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.

                  Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool

                  ## 3 Lock Types

                  Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
                  Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
                  Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
                  Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangement

                  Sketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock

                  ## 4 Pins Types

                  A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).

                  Standard: plain cylinder
                  Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
                  Serrated: like standard pins, but clickier

                  There are many others, but they're much rarer.

                  Sketches: each of the 3 pins

                  ## 5 Techniques

                  Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
                  Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
                  Raking: generate random bitting guesses—try rising, falling, flat, and rocking motions

                  Sketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions

                  ## 6 Practice Locks

                  Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
                  Laminated Master: good until trivial
                  Master 140: has spools, good until trivial

                  Sketches: each of the 3 padlocks

                  ## 7 Bypasses

                  Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
                  Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
                  Shims: good for cheap padlocks

                  Sketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims

                  ## 8 About Alice

                  Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.

                  Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock

                  LGBTQIA.space/@alice
                  [email address]

                  darksheeparts@mastoart.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                  darksheeparts@mastoart.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                  darksheeparts@mastoart.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #15

                  @alice

                  I had no idea you were into lock picking.

                  I don't suppose you do or would consider a total beginners' course?

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                    I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.

                    It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.

                    If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.

                    I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.

                    ---

                    # 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking

                    ## 2 Picks

                    Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.

                    Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool

                    ## 3 Lock Types

                    Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
                    Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
                    Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
                    Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangement

                    Sketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock

                    ## 4 Pins Types

                    A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).

                    Standard: plain cylinder
                    Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
                    Serrated: like standard pins, but clickier

                    There are many others, but they're much rarer.

                    Sketches: each of the 3 pins

                    ## 5 Techniques

                    Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
                    Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
                    Raking: generate random bitting guesses—try rising, falling, flat, and rocking motions

                    Sketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions

                    ## 6 Practice Locks

                    Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
                    Laminated Master: good until trivial
                    Master 140: has spools, good until trivial

                    Sketches: each of the 3 padlocks

                    ## 7 Bypasses

                    Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
                    Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
                    Shims: good for cheap padlocks

                    Sketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims

                    ## 8 About Alice

                    Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.

                    Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock

                    LGBTQIA.space/@alice
                    [email address]

                    jacklund@freeradical.zoneJ This user is from outside of this forum
                    jacklund@freeradical.zoneJ This user is from outside of this forum
                    jacklund@freeradical.zone
                    wrote last edited by
                    #16

                    @alice YES!!!!

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • nikkileah@mendeddrum.orgN nikkileah@mendeddrum.org

                      @alice @diverdutch "Alice shares her passion clearly and makes learning fun, unlocking potential wherever she goes"

                      alice@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                      alice@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                      alice@lgbtqia.space
                      wrote last edited by
                      #17

                      @Nikkileah I'm not a girl, but I like the sentiment 💖

                      @diverdutch

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • sempf@infosec.exchangeS sempf@infosec.exchange

                        @alice I would love to see this! An updated zine would be awesome. Have you seen Schuyler's from like 20 years ago? https://www.locksport.net/files/LSI_Guide_To_Lockpicking.pdf

                        alice@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                        alice@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                        alice@lgbtqia.space
                        wrote last edited by
                        #18

                        @Sempf ooo, that's good! Way bigger than what I want to make (I'm aiming for a 5-minute primer to cover the most FAQ I get, that'll fit in a pocket), but I'm going to share that one with folx too.

                        1 Reply Last reply
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