Ok.. had to kill a bit of time before I went to pick up a friend. I'm not sure if this fits the Wiki model or not, but it's what I could come up with. As I said, feel free to discuss and edit at will, or just scrap altogether. Whatever suits you.
Cheers,
db
Locksport
History:
Locksport refers to the sport or recreation of studying and learning to defeat locking systems. Its enthusiasts learn a variety of skills including lock picking, lock bumping, and a variety of other skills traditionally known only to locksmiths and other security professionals. Locksport followers enjoy the challenge and excitement of learning to defeat all forms of locks, and often gather together in sport groups to share knowledge, exchange ideas, and participate in a variety of recreational activities and contests.
Though lock picking has been around for as long as locks have, the organized hobby of lock picking is a relatively recent phenomenon. The earliest known organized group of lock picking enthusiasts is the German club SSDeV (Sportsfreunde der Sperrtechnik - Deutschland e.V. or, translated Sportsenthusiasts of Lockpicking – Germany). SSDeV was founded by Steffen Wernéry in 1997 (
http://lockpicking.org/SSDeV/hist@eng.php). As the group grew in Germany, another group was founded in The Netherlands by Barry Wels. This group, originally called NVHS, and currently called TOOOL (The Open Organisation Of Lockpickers [spelling intentional]), also helped to pioneer the collaborative hobby of lock picking.
The popularization of hobby lock picking in North America is largely credited to the web forum LockPicking101.com, currently the largest lock picking related forum on the web. Members visit to discuss locks, techniques and tool. The board is host to a very large collection of threads on topics related to locksport, and acts as the largest public “infobase†on the web. As well, the widely distributed document formally titled The MIT Guide to Lock Picking by Ted The Tool was a source of instruction for many enthusiast new to the hobby of lock picking. The MIT Guide To Lock Picking was originally written as to aide enthusiasts of a controversial activity called Urban Exploration. Today, virtually all locksport enthusiasts condemn the practice of picking locks without permission or illegal entry.
The term locksport was adopted by lock picking enthusiasts as a way of differentiating what they do from locksmiths, as well as from those who might choose to pick locks for nefarious purposes. As of early 2005, the term had been suggested, but not widely adopted. The creation of the sport group Locksport International in July of 2005, founded by Josh Nekrep, Kim Bohnet, and Devon McDormand of LockPicking101.com, helped to solidify the term within the community, and today the term is widely adopted in North America by those who practice the craft of lock picking for fun and sport.
Shortly after the creation of Locksport International, TOOOL began to branch out to North America, opening its first TOOOL.US chapter in New Jersey under the leadership of Eric Michaud. TOOOL.US and LSI are currently the two widely recognized and geographically diverse locksport groups in North America.
Locksport Philosophy
At the core of locksport is the philosophical belief in responsible full disclosure. Locksport enthusiasts target “security though obscurity†that is common within the locksmith industry, as well as among lock manufacturers. Those who choose to participate in locksport often seek to discover security vulnerabilities and notify lock manufacturers as well, in some instances, the public, in an effort to promote improvements in the field of physical security and to aide consumers in making better, more informed decisions about their own security.
This philosophy is contradictory to that held by many locksmith organizations, and locksport enthusiasts have come under attack for releasing information about lesser-known vulnerabilities. None the less, locksport enthusiasts persist in discovering weaknesses in all forms of physical security.
Locksport Activities
At locksport meetings, members regularly participate in a variety of activities such as lock challenges, lock relay races, standardized tests, and many other such activities dreamed up by the members themselves.
One such activity is known as the Padlock Challenge, where members each start with a predefined number of padlocks linked together. As participants pick a lock, they attached the lock to the chain of padlocks of another participant. The goal is to be the first to rid oneself of all ones locks.
Another common activity is some form of speed challenge, when members are given a limited time to pick a lock, or compete for the best time on one or more locks.
Locksport Contests
There are several organized lock picking contests that are held each year. Both SSDeV and TOOOL.NL hold a major contest each year, and hobbyists travel from many different countries to participate. In North America, contests are held at the Defcon Convention in Las Vegas each year, and the HOPE Convention every second year. [I know there’s more than that, but I have no details… seems to me also at What The Hack, and perhaps another hacker con?] Rules and format of contests vary from event to event.
Lock Picking Conventions
Though there are currently no conventions exclusive to locksport, enthusiasts have found acceptance among a variety of hacker conventions. Defcon and HOPE are the most notable. At each of these conventions a dedicated area call The Lock Picking Village is set up where contests and presentations are held, and attendees can learn to pick locks and watch others practice and compete
Ethics
Because lock picking is sometimes viewed as a nefarious craft, locksport enthusiasts uphold a very rigorous standard of ethics. The credo of locksports has often been described as:
“You may only pick locks that you own, or those to which you’ve been given expressed permission to pick by the rightful ownerâ€
In an effort to keep lock picking skill away from those who would abuse it, members of locksport groups uphold a zero-tolerance for illegal or immoral lock picking, bypass, or other forms of entry. Though accounts of lock picking being used for crime are statistically very low, locksport enthusiasts feel they must uphold such strict standards to repudiate the oft held misconception that they are participating in illegal activities.