Hacker Disables More Than 100 Cars Remotely
OPS_admin | Mar 18, 2010 | Comments 0
More than 100 drivers in Austin, Texas found their cars disabled or the horns honking out of control, after an intruder ran amok in a web-based vehicle-immobilization system normally used to get the attention of consumers delinquent in their auto payments.
Police with Austin’s High Tech Crime Unit on Wednesday arrested 20-year-old Omar Ramos-Lopez, a former Texas Auto Center employee who was laid off last month, and allegedly sought revenge by bricking the cars sold from the dealership’s four Austin-area lots.
“We initially dismissed it as mechanical failure,” says Texas Auto Center manager Martin Garcia. “We started having a rash of up to a hundred customers at one time complaining. Some customers complained of the horns going off in the middle of the night. The only option they had was to remove the battery.”
Full Story: Hacker Disables More Than 100 Cars Remotely | Threat Level | Wired.com.
OPS: So the obvious question becomes are these Toyota acceleration problems connected to hacking the cars computer? Is this what Toyota is really afraid will come out? Are other car companies building this in? Is your car rigged like this?
Filed Under: Science & Technology


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