Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

'Smart' cars run greater risk of being hacked

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Sep, 2014 11:50 AM
  • 'Smart' cars run greater risk of being hacked
The cars of the future will be safer, smarter and offer hi-tech gadgets but simultaneously the risk of car hacking is also growing, warns a road safety expert.
 
"If someone hacks into a vehicle's electronics via a wireless network and exploits the current security loophole, they can track or take control of it," said professor Andry Rakotonirainy from Queensland University of Technology's centre for accident research and road safety.
 
He researched the security systems of existing fleets, and future autonomous and connected cars and found there was little protection against hacking.
 
"The security protection on cars is virtually non-existent, it is at a level of protection that a desktop computer system had in the 1980s. The basic security requirements such as authentication, confidentiality and integrity are not strong," he explained.
 
What this means is that as vehicles become more and more connected and autonomous - with the ability to communicate to other vehicles through wireless networks - the threat of cyber attack increases putting people's safety and security at risk.
 
For example, all new cars are equipped with a technology called CAN-BUS, located under the steering wheel, allowing anyone to check the health of a vehicle and to control it.
 
"This CAN-BUS allows all micro-controllers within a car to communicate to each other and is accessible via a mere plug," he said.
 
It can be used to control almost everything such as the airbags, brakes, cruise control and power steering systems. CAN-BUS can be accessed locally or remotely with simple devices.
 
"This is just the tip of the iceberg as future cars will feature a tremendous mix of wireless networks and offer numerous opportunities to improve safety, entertainment and comfort," Rakotonirainy noted.
 
"It is vital for car makers, government and road safety experts to turn their attention to this global security threat," professor Rakotonirainy concluded.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Social media changing rules of engagement: Expert

Social media changing rules of engagement: Expert
Riding on disruptive technology platforms, social media was changing the rules of engagement, making its stakeholders face more challenges than opportunities in the virtual world, an expert said here Friday.

Social media changing rules of engagement: Expert

Screw filter on bottle and drink clean water

Screw filter on bottle and drink clean water
Imagine screwing a water filter onto a bottle containing polluted water and voila - you can put it straight in your mouth and drink...

Screw filter on bottle and drink clean water

'Google street view' of galaxies a reality

'Google street view' of galaxies a reality
Australian astronomers have developed a home-grown instrument based on bundles of optical fibres that gives the first 'Google street view' of the cosmos....

'Google street view' of galaxies a reality

Creating specialised crystals with milk, fog

Creating specialised crystals with milk, fog
Creating highly purified crystals to make high-powered lenses, specialised optics and computers for consumers can no longer be a difficult and expensive method....

Creating specialised crystals with milk, fog

China to clean up porn on phone apps

China to clean up porn on phone apps
The ministry of industry and information technology will step up supervision over telecommunication service providers, application creators and online app stores...

China to clean up porn on phone apps

Self-cooling solar cells to last longer

Self-cooling solar cells to last longer
By adding a specially patterned layer of silica glass to the surface of ordinary solar cells, a team of researchers has found a way to let solar cells cool themselves...

Self-cooling solar cells to last longer