Skip to main content

Technologies to protect connected cars ‘not being utilised’

A three-year study by IOActive’s Cybersecurity Division has found half of vehicle vulnerabilities could allow cyber attackers to take control of a vehicle - and 71 per cent are ‘easy to exploit’. The research, detailed in a whitepaper, Commonalities in Vehicle Vulnerabilities, is based on real-world security assessments. Technologies which could be exploited include cellular radio, Bluetooth, wi-fi, companion apps, vehicle to vehicle (V2V) radio, onboard diagnostic equipment, infotainment media and Zigbe
August 10, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
A three-year study by IOActive’s Cybersecurity Division has found half of vehicle vulnerabilities could allow cyber attackers to take control of a vehicle - and 71 per cent are ‘easy to exploit’.

The research, detailed in a whitepaper, Commonalities in Vehicle Vulnerabilities, is based on real-world security assessments. Technologies which could be exploited include cellular radio, Bluetooth, wi-fi, companion apps, vehicle to vehicle (V2V) radio, onboard diagnostic equipment, infotainment media and Zigbee radio.

The white paper provides a metadata analysis of the many private vehicle security assessments IOActive has conducted since 2013 and includes an analysis of the impact, likelihood, overall risk and remediation of vulnerabilities IOActive consultants have discovered over the course of thousands of testing hours.

According to report author Corey Thuen, senior security consultant at IOActive, there are some idiosyncrasies between sub-categories of automotive and further between automotive and IoT or ICS/SCADA but, in general, these embedded computers are all using the same technologies under the hood. They all suffer from many of the same problems and challenges.

He continues, “The connected car is forcing automotive companies to become much more than automotive companies. They must now be database managers, cloud providers, enterprise network operators, etc., etc. Taking the car into the future means having to learn all of the lessons that Microsoft, Google, or Apple have learned over the past 15 years. The plus side, however, is that along the way these companies documented the bumps and bruises and now there are really great roadmaps and resources for implementing security.”

Jon Geater, chief technology officer, 596 Thales e-Security, said: “To help defend against certain cyber-attacks, and protect the integrity of the supply chain, connected components require clear authentication processes. While vehicle OEMs and their suppliers have recognised that cryptographically-based digital signatures provide the strongest form of authentication, this also necessitates the management and protection of certificates and the underlying keys. The rapid increase in connected components has created the need for broad-scale secure key management, supported by a public key infrastructure.

“Adding even further complexity, vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communications, although first introduced in 2017 production vehicles, will soon become the norm, requiring manufacturers to identify and implement the necessary technologies to protect drivers, passengers and the wider community from cyber-attackers.”

Thuen concludes, “The technologies needed to protect the connected car against cyber attack are already in existence, they just aren’t being utilised.”

Related Content

  • October 25, 2024
    Huawei develops the next generation of wireless communications
    Huawei has developed and already deployed high-integrity and richly featured cellular communications solutions for the railway sector which are based on the new FRMCS standard and 4-5G technology
  • March 22, 2012
    Slovenian police get smart with truckers
    Writing in the newsletter of TISPOL, an organisation established by the traffic police forces of Europe to improve road safety and law enforcement on the roads of Europe, Danijel Kumberger, National Traffic Police Unit, Slovenia, has revealed how smart the force has had to become to catch law-breaking truckers. As he points out, with automotive technical progress, it is vital to keep in touch with innovation because in modern vehicles, it is all about electronics, data sharing and processing of all kinds of
  • October 11, 2016
    Denso outlines vision for of future car technology
    Global automotive components manufacturer Denso has used this week’s ITS World Congress to roll out its vision for the future of incar technology to the broader transport industry. Denso, which supplies components including management systems for petrol and diesel engines, hybrid vehicle products, transmission management system and cooling systems to most leading automotive OEMs, outlined its offerings for what it calls “co-operation among five key functions”.
  • October 26, 2017
    EdgeVis removes bandwidth barriers to mobile streamed video
    A new generation of video compression can lower transmission costs of data and make streaming from mobile and body-worn cameras a reality, as Colin Sowman discovers. Bandwidth limitations have long been the bottleneck restricting the expanded use of video streaming for ITS, monitoring and surveillance purposes. Recent years have seen this countered to some degree by the introduction of ‘edge processing’ whereby ANPR, incident detection and other image processing is moved into (or close to) the camera, so