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  • foxtrapper

    Aug. 11, 2010 2:46 p.m. foxtrapper SuperDork

    We all knew it had to happen eventually.

    http://jalopnik.com/5610373/hackers-wirelessly-crash-cars-computer-at-highway-speeds

  • Raze

    Aug. 11, 2010 3:40 p.m. Raze Dork

    I like the shark hood ornament

  • Aug. 11, 2010 5:55 p.m. skruffy SuperDork

    OMG, someone might be able to make me think I've got a bad tire pressure sensor at highway speed! Horrors!!!

  • JoeyM

    Aug. 11, 2010 6:26 p.m. JoeyM Dork

    skruffy wrote:

    OMG, someone might be able to make me think I've got a bad tire pressure sensor at highway speed! Horrors!!!

    Yeah, it doesn't sound like a big deal.....other than the fact that after doing this for a while they fried the computer (costs $$$) or that the pressure sensors have unique id's, which means that someone will eventually use this to track individual wheels (...and the cars that they are on.)

    The computer security issue I'm waiting for is a crime wave of luxo-barge thefts when people figure out how to spoof the onstar signals to unlock cars.

    I'll go put my tinfoil hat on.

  • ignorant

    Aug. 11, 2010 8:02 p.m. ignorant SuperDork

    article said:

    The researchers note that it took several hours of graduate-level engineering to devise their tools and crack into the monitors

    so that means your average 13 year old could do it in about 15 minutes...

  • carzan

    Aug. 11, 2010 8:48 p.m. carzan HalfDork

    ignorant wrote:

    article said:

    The researchers note that it took several hours of graduate-level engineering to devise their tools and crack into the monitors

    so that means your average 13 year old could do it in about 15 minutes...

    Hehe, yeah, that's what I was thinking. And if someone can figure out how to unlock the doors of an Onstar-equipped car, they can probably figure out how to shut it down on the road, too.

  • Aug. 11, 2010 10:18 p.m. Mikey52_1 Reader

    carzan wrote:

    ignorant wrote:

    article said:

    The researchers note that it took several hours of graduate-level engineering to devise their tools and crack into the monitors

    so that means your average 13 year old could do it in about 15 minutes...

    Hehe, yeah, that's what I was thinking. And if someone can figure out how to unlock the doors of an Onstar-equipped car, they can probably figure out how to shut it down on the road, too.

    Yeah! Isn't there an Onstar ad doing that very thing, so some state troopers can catch a miscreant who had the temerity to jack an Onstar equipped Yukon?

  • Slyp_Dawg

    Aug. 11, 2010 10:53 p.m. Slyp_Dawg Reader

    I'm glad the only real wireless link that Sparky has to the outside world is the radio and the keyless entry. being an '04, it was before the era of mandatory TPMS

    this COULD potentially wreak havoc if someone decided to go to a high level race where telemetry was allowed and start screwing with the onboard systems via the telemetry link, depending on how much of the car was computer controlled and how much was a physical, mechanical/hydraulic/pneumatic connection/linkage/hose. I'm not really sure how secure the link is on real-time telemetry, though

  • P71

    Aug. 11, 2010 11:37 p.m. P71 SuperDork

    Newfangled witchcraft, these black-box computer things are the devil! I gotta go adjust the points on my AMC.

 
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