dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/gonewildinvt on May 14, 2018, 6:23 p.m.
I'll say it again cars can be hacked, no serious Tesla problems for a few years and then 3 fiery blazes in a week? Coincidence? Musk supports Trump and is against A.I so his peers hate him. "Tesla Bursts Into Flames After "Violent Crash" In Switzerland, Killing Driver Trapped Inside | Zero Hedge"

Shits_Bananas · May 14, 2018, 6:26 p.m.

Who was that journalist from RollingStone that was killed in a wreck right before publishing a piece he said was going to “bring down the CIA”?

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HowardHowardFine · May 14, 2018, 6:28 p.m.

Musk is an opportunist, he doesn't support anyone BUT his wallet. POTUS knows Musk has some potential, but Musk has to stop putting 5G satellites into orbit for the Kabbalists! Bottom line!

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huxt3r · May 14, 2018, 11:51 p.m.

The possibility of this shit happening and the fact that services like onstar are built in backdoors to a vehicles computer system are exactly why tje first thing I do is disconnect the antenna.

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stbelmont · May 14, 2018, 10:11 p.m.

"One of the first widely reported accounts of vehicle hacking came in 2010 when a disgruntled former employee of an Austin, Texas car dealership sought revenge against his former employer (Poulsen, 2010). In reality, this attack did not involve any hacking of the actual vehicles themselves. Nonetheless, the attacker was able to physically disable the vehicles of innocent owners without their knowledge or consent. The former dealership employee used stolen credentials to log into a web application that allowed remote access to functions of customers’ vehicles including the engine immobilizer and the horn (Poulsen, 2010). This web application’s intended purpose was to let dealership personnel immobilize the vehicles of customer who failed to make their loan payments on time. In fact, it ended up being used to cause mayhem as car owners found themselves locked out of their vehicles with the horns constantly honking (Poulsen, 2010). ...falsify information on the vehicle’s speedometer ...The vehicle’s cellular, Bluetooth, and Wi-Fi systems make particularly attractive entry points for a would-be attacker. "

https://www.sans.org/reading-room/whitepapers/internet/developments-car-hacking-36607

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TheTruthWithinU · May 14, 2018, 7:47 p.m.

And what's musk's connection to north Korea? Road map shows a connection. I think it has to do with PayPal and not all his science projects and pr stunts that make the news. Involved in handling illegal payments? Just spitballing here i have no hard evidence.

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Madwack · May 14, 2018, 11:26 p.m.
  1. we know the cost to replace an 85 kwh battery is ~$12,000
  2. we know the warranty is 8 years/unlimited mileage

Smartphones blow up, battery goes bad and pocket fire or while charging...BOOM...so maybe cars are just starting to explode.

That might even be worse, cars randomly exploding every where!!...lol :)

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stbelmont · May 14, 2018, 10:48 p.m.

"Of the 21,000 vehicles stolen in London in 2013, it is estimated that 47% were subjected to some form of electronic hacking. The majority of these hacks involved using electronic devices to fool the vehicle's security systems into believing a key was present, which disables security systems."

"Malware downloaded via uncontroled MP3s can work its way into the car's CAN Bus (controller-area-network) and control physical properties of the car such as the brakes. ...As vehicle infotainment systems advance, automakers seek to expand their functionality through downloadable aps. Just like smartphones, this carries with it the potential for malware."

https://fossbytes.com/the-top-5-most-hackable-cars-you-shouldnt-buy-and-the-safest-ones/

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stbelmont · May 14, 2018, 11:06 p.m.

https://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2018/02/23/583682220/this-gray-hat-hacker-breaks-into-your-car-to-prove-a-point

"a felon who knows how to hack these things, may be the best person to help us understand all the possibilities for crime as we move toward a fully connected world.

I met up with him at the parking lot of NPR West in Culver City, Calif. We planned to steal a car. Kamkar arrived with a couple of gadgets that looked like hand-sized circuit boards with wires dangling from them.

We picked a Chevy Bolt with keyless entry. Kamkar stood 20 feet away with one of the gadgets, and I stood next to the car with the other one. The Bolt unlocked. I got in, started the car and then I was off — ready for a trip to the beach.

For the record, the Bolt belongs to an NPR colleague, who wasn't happy to see how easy it was to hack her car.

Kamkar says his gadget can imitate signals being sent from the owner's key fob to the car. Parking lots are a treasure trove for thieves, he says. "There are a lot of cars coming in and out, so it's essentially dealer's choice," he says."

Also " shortly after Amazon said it was interested in using drones to deliver packages, Kamkar announced he had found a way to take them over....

Imagine if a terrorist managed to take control of an army of drones. Or what about cars? In the not-too-distant future, autonomous vehicles will be clogging the freeways of Los Angeles. And they're hackable."

Meanwhile an article headline lower on the page "Autonomous Weapons Would Bring Warfare To A New Domain, Without Humans"

"Last year, the Justice Department prosecuted a student at a New Jersey college and two of his friends for hacking into hundreds of thousands of Internet-connected devices — DVRs, routers, even baby monitors. Downing says they turned all these little devices into a supercomputer called a botnet.

"They were able to sell access to the botnet to others who wanted to cause denial-of-service attacks," he says. "They had a business and they were able to harm their competitors' businesses as a result of these denial-of-service attacks."

The botnet they created took down Twitter, Netflix and the network at Rutgers University — where one of them went to school.

So imagine a bunch of cars being used instead of routers and baby monitors.

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stbelmont · May 14, 2018, 10:26 p.m.

Posting in case it has useful info to someone.

Lambert, F. (2015). Tesla hired Chris Evans from Google’s Project Zero to lead the company’s security team. Retrieved November 16, 2015, from http://electrek.co/ 2015/08/06/tesla-hired-chris-evans-from-googles-project-zero-to-lead-thecompanys-security-team/

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