In would be interesting to see if this was done at the Benz stadium. I’m a local so I’m pretty familiar with the stadium.
I’ve done this in my younger years at Auburn and Georgia’s stadium. The hardest part was getting into student sections. In the 2000s you can pass back student tickets and get by the ushers once inside the stadium. It’s much harder once they started asking for student IDs.
Going straight through the front gate is very ballsy. I usually tried to find a weak spot in a fence or watch for others who knew weak spots. Hiding in a bathroom or dumpster before hand is a good idea too.
I’ve revently seen people at music festivals use the shotgun approach. Break through a gate with 10 or more people then run in different directions.
I can afford tickets now and I’m not really interested in getting into legal trouble anymore but I love to think of ways to do it.
Fake student IDs can be purchased online for not much money, and I bet it's much less risky to use one to get into a student section than using a fake driver's license to buy alcohol.
The NFL takes over stadium operations during a superbowl. They bring in their own staff and they’re much more rigorous than normal event staff.
I wouldn’t play with national events like the superbowl. I think even minor mischief can bring you legal trouble for years.
With that said during normal events the employee entrance is usually easier to get into. At least one stadium I was at cared more about you when leaving than entering. They wanted to catch thives.
Nothing wrong with using the hacker mentality to carry out a victimless crime. I don't think anyone's going to cry about the NFL losing out on the cost of 1 ticket for a game where so many millions are being flung around.
To back up your point, 2600 and DEF CON have both occasionally touched on the type of tactics and social engineering needed to pull of /hacks/ of this nature.
Situational attitude is critical for these scenarios.
My example: As a teenage shift manager in a mall store, my boss had an opportunity to break the lease and close the store.
He paid me to do some cleanup and other work. For reasons unknown to me, he needed to get the safe and it’s contents out of the store in a hurry.
So picture an 18 year old kid rolling a large safe with a hand truck at midnight though the mall. A security guy stops me near the door, says “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”
My response: “What does it look like, I’m moving a safe. Get that door, dude.”
The guard opened the door, said nothing and watched as me and a guy in a hoodie loaded the safe into the back of a white rental van.
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[ 1.9 ms ] story [ 40.2 ms ] threadI’ve done this in my younger years at Auburn and Georgia’s stadium. The hardest part was getting into student sections. In the 2000s you can pass back student tickets and get by the ushers once inside the stadium. It’s much harder once they started asking for student IDs.
Going straight through the front gate is very ballsy. I usually tried to find a weak spot in a fence or watch for others who knew weak spots. Hiding in a bathroom or dumpster before hand is a good idea too.
I’ve revently seen people at music festivals use the shotgun approach. Break through a gate with 10 or more people then run in different directions.
I can afford tickets now and I’m not really interested in getting into legal trouble anymore but I love to think of ways to do it.
I wouldn’t play with national events like the superbowl. I think even minor mischief can bring you legal trouble for years.
With that said during normal events the employee entrance is usually easier to get into. At least one stadium I was at cared more about you when leaving than entering. They wanted to catch thives.
Way to glorify breaking laws.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6065058
My example: As a teenage shift manager in a mall store, my boss had an opportunity to break the lease and close the store.
He paid me to do some cleanup and other work. For reasons unknown to me, he needed to get the safe and it’s contents out of the store in a hurry.
So picture an 18 year old kid rolling a large safe with a hand truck at midnight though the mall. A security guy stops me near the door, says “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”
My response: “What does it look like, I’m moving a safe. Get that door, dude.”
The guard opened the door, said nothing and watched as me and a guy in a hoodie loaded the safe into the back of a white rental van.