Wired: Hacker Says He Can Remotely Kill Car Engines Via Compromised GPS Apps

Wired: Hacker Says He Can Remotely Kill Car Engines Via Compromised GPS Apps:

Motherboard reports that a hacker going by the name L&M claims to have hacked into 7,000 iTrack and 20,000 ProTrack accounts—GPS tracking tools—and from there gained access to some vehicles’ internal systems. The hacker says he could turn off cars’ engines as they drove under 12 miles an hour or were stopped. On all the vehicles, he was able to track the cars as they drove. He got in by realizing that all users of those apps had been given the same default password. After brute-forcing millions of usernames, he was in. Motherboard confirmed the breach with four people whose information L&M listed in a sample of the breached data he shared with the website. L&M says he did this to show the companies how compromised their security is and that he has never remotely turned off a car engine. So I guess that’s some comfort?

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