2013-08-31, 19:20
Networked Cars Are Coming, But Their Hacks Are Already Here
Vehicles on the road today are already joining our larger "Internet of things." They sync up with our phones through Bluetooth; they register on GPS satellites for navigation; and their mechanical difficulties can be diagnosed at a distance with services like On Star. But future technology that allows cars to talk to each other directly promises to be much more disruptive still. And that technology has gotten a new push in the last week---at the same time that its potential security weakness
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DiscoverT...POZg0CDiU/
Vehicles on the road today are already joining our larger "Internet of things." They sync up with our phones through Bluetooth; they register on GPS satellites for navigation; and their mechanical difficulties can be diagnosed at a distance with services like On Star. But future technology that allows cars to talk to each other directly promises to be much more disruptive still. And that technology has gotten a new push in the last week---at the same time that its potential security weakness
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DiscoverT...POZg0CDiU/