There's a new type of crime happening on America's highways and byways. A
nationwide crime spree in the making, if you will, whereby high-tech thieves can unlock vehicles easier than you'd like to think possible.
We're way beyond rocks, cobblestones, baseball bats, shims and crowbars
now. Using improvised electronic devices that recreate the same signals
as the key fobs many of us carry, thieves can pop the lock on your car
from afar, then rifle through your belongings and steal whatever they
like, all without the noise and trouble of breaking a window or jimmying
a lock.
Once the stuff of urban legend, this kind of crime is now on the rise,
according to police. "We believe that this code-grabbing technology was
utilized and we are looking into it," Sgt. Andrew Schoeff of the Chicago
Police Department told ABC News after thieves there broke into multiple cars in one neighborhood.
The way this crime works is still somewhat of a mystery in
crime-fighting circles. And while there are doubtless ways to avoid
becoming a victim, I'm not sure what they might be beyond owning a car
that doesn't use the fob system.
A Terrifying Turn
While it's unsettling to have your car invaded or stolen while you're on
a Labor Day trip with your family, it's not life threatening. What
scares me is when a car hacker evolves from messing with your doors to
invading your car's computer system.
The possibility of this even stranger and more dangerous crime is
lurking on the horizon. Most modern cars use computers to control
everything from engine compression to cruise control, airbags and
brakes. Those computers communicate with each other on open networks.
Using an $80,000 grant from the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA), two researchers recently hacked the onboard computers of
a Toyota Prius and a Ford Escape SUV.
They made the Prius accelerate and brake, as well as jerk the wheel
while traveling at high speeds. They managed to turn the Ford's steering
wheel at low speeds and disable the brakes, which caused researcher
Charlie Miller to drive the SUV into his garage and totally destroy his
own lawnmower. This is the stuff of nightmares.
"Once you are through that initial barrier, you can and will be able to
do almost anything you want to," security researcher Don Bailey recently
told NPR.
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