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less than $100 and a Netbook computer, Augustinowicz explained, he could swipe credit card numbers, expiration dates, and in some cases, even people's names.People who thought there was no way their pocket could be picked without laying a hand on them, soon learned they were wrong.Scanning one willing participant's wallet, Augustinowicz showed the man his credit card number and expiration date on his computer. "There you go. It's a MasterCard," he explained."You have a SunTrust card in there," Augustinowicz explained to a second "victim." "And that's your account number and expiration date," he said showing the man the screen.In about an hour he scanned 26 wallets and purses. Five of them nearly 20% had cards with RFID chips.Augustinowicz said crooks could work a crowd, steal numbers, and then e mail them anywhere."You might as well print your credit card number across your T shirt and walk around with it because it's the same difference," he said. passports issued since 2006 also contain RFID technology that, Augustinowicz said, can make personal information vulnerable to theft.Augustinowicz is the founder of Identity Stronghold, a company that markets secure sleeves and ID holders designed to block RFID hacking. government.So is Augustinowicz just trying to scare people into buying his product, or is the threat real?Experts at the San Diego based Identity Theft Resource Center told WREG that they've never seen a case of RFID skimming used to steal information.WREG's Steve Noll show showed a video of Augustinowicz's demonstration to University of Memphis professor and computer security expert