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Science-Technology Title: Hackers Remotely Kill a Jeep on the Highway—With Me in It I was driving 70 mph on the edge of downtown St. Louis when the exploit began to take hold. Though I hadnt touched the dashboard, the vents in the Jeep Cherokee started blasting cold air at the maximum setting, chilling the sweat on my back through the in-seat climate control system. Next the radio switched to the local hip hop station and began blaring Skee-lo at full volume. I spun the control knob left and hit the power button, to no avail. Then the windshield wipers turned on, and wiper fluid blurred the glass. As I tried to cope with all this, a picture of the two hackers performing these stunts appeared on the cars digital display: Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek, wearing their trademark track suits. A nice touch, I thought. The Jeeps strange behavior wasnt entirely unexpected. Id come to St. Louis to be Miller and Valaseks digital crash-test dummy, a willing subject on whom they could test the car-hacking research theyd been doing over the past year. The result of their work was a hacking techniquewhat the security industry calls a zero-day exploitthat can target Jeep Cherokees and give the attacker wireless control, via the Internet, to any of thousands of vehicles. Their code is an automakers nightmare: software that lets hackers send commands through the Jeeps entertainment system to its dashboard functions, steering, brakes, and transmission, all from a laptop that may be across the country. To better simulate the experience of driving a vehicle while its being hijacked by an invisible, virtual force, Miller and Valasek refused to tell me ahead of time what kinds of attacks they planned to launch from Millers laptop in his house 10 miles west. Instead, they merely assured me that they wouldnt do anything life-threatening. Then they told me to drive the Jeep onto the highway. Remember, Andy, Miller had said through my iPhones speaker just before I pulled onto the Interstate 64 on-ramp, no matter what happens, dont panic.1 Charlie Miller (left) and Chris Valasek hacking into a Jeep Cherokee from Millers basement as I drove the SUV on a highway ten miles away. As the two hackers remotely toyed with the air-conditioning, radio, and windshield wipers, I mentally congratulated myself on my courage under pressure. Thats when they cut the transmission. Immediately my accelerator stopped working. As I frantically pressed the pedal and watched the RPMs climb, the Jeep lost half its speed, then slowed to a crawl. This occurred just as I reached a long overpass, with no shoulder to offer an escape. The experiment had ceased to be fun. At that point, the interstate began to slope upward, so the Jeep lost more momentum and barely crept forward. Cars lined up behind my bumper before passing me, honking. I could see an 18-wheeler approaching in my rearview mirror. I hoped its driver saw me, too, and could tell I was paralyzed on the highway. Youre doomed! Valasek shouted, but I couldnt make out his heckling over the blast of the radio, now pumping Kanye West. The semi loomed in the mirror, bearing down on my immobilized Jeep. I followed Millers advice: I didnt panic. I did, however, drop any semblance of bravery, grab my iPhone with a clammy fist, and beg the hackers to make it stop. Wireless Carjackers This wasnt the first time Miller and Valasek had put me behind the wheel of a compromised car. In the summer of 2013, I drove a Ford Escape and a Toyota Prius around a South Bend, Indiana, parking lot while they sat in the backseat with their laptops, cackling as they disabled my brakes, honked the horn, jerked the seat belt, and commandeered the steering wheel. When you lose faith that a car will do what you tell it to do, Miller observed at the time, it really changes your whole view of how the thing works. Back then, however, their hacks had a comforting limitation: The attackers PC had been wired into the vehicles onboard diagnostic port, a feature that normally gives repair technicians access to information about the cars electronically controlled systems. A mere two years later, that carjacking has gone wireless. Miller and Valasek plan to publish a portion of their exploit on the Internet, timed to a talk theyre giving at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas next month. Its the latest in a series of revelations from the two hackers that have spooked the automotive industry and even helped to inspire legislation; WIRED has learned that senators Ed Markey and Richard Blumenthal plan to introduce an automotive security bill today to set new digital security standards for cars and trucks, first sparked when Markey took note of Miller and Valaseks work in 2013. As an auto-hacking antidote, the bill couldnt be timelier. The attack tools Miller and Valasek developed can remotely trigger more than the dashboard and transmission tricks they used against me on the highway. They demonstrated as much on the same day as my traumatic experience on I-64; After narrowly averting death by semi-trailer, I managed to roll the lame Jeep down an exit ramp, re-engaged the transmission by turning the ignition off and on, and found an empty lot where I could safely continue the experiment. Miller and Valaseks full arsenal includes functions that at lower speeds fully kill the engine, abruptly engage the brakes, or disable them altogether. The most disturbing maneuver came when they cut the Jeeps brakes, leaving me frantically pumping the pedal as the 2-ton SUV slid uncontrollably into a ditch. The researchers say theyre working on perfecting their steering controlfor now they can only hijack the wheel when the Jeep is in reverse. Their hack enables surveillance too: They can track a targeted Jeeps GPS coordinates, measure its speed, and even drop pins on a map to trace its route. Miller attempts to rescue the Jeep after its brakes were remotely disabled, sending it into a ditch. All of this is possible only because Chrysler, like practically all carmakers, is doing its best to turn the modern automobile into a smartphone. Uconnect, an Internet-connected computer feature in hundreds of thousands of Fiat Chrysler cars, SUVs, and trucks, controls the vehicles entertainment and navigation, enables phone calls, and even offers a Wi-Fi hot spot. And thanks to one vulnerable element, which Miller and Valasek wont identify until their Black Hat talk, Uconnects cellular connection also lets anyone who knows the cars IP address gain access from anywhere in the country. From an attackers perspective, its a super nice vulnerability, Miller says. From that entry point, Miller and Valaseks attack pivots to an adjacent chip in the cars head unitthe hardware for its entertainment systemsilently rewriting the chips firmware to plant their code. That rewritten firmware is capable of sending commands through the cars internal computer network, known as a CAN bus, to its physical components like the engine and wheels. Miller and Valasek say the attack on the entertainment system seems to work on any Chrysler vehicle with Uconnect from late 2013, all of 2014, and early 2015. Theyve only tested their full set of physical hacks, including ones targeting transmission and braking systems, on a Jeep Cherokee, though they believe that most of their attacks could be tweaked to work on any Chrysler vehicle with the vulnerable Uconnect head unit. They have yet to try remotely hacking into other makes and models of cars. After the researchers reveal the details of their work in Vegas, only two things will prevent their tool from enabling a wave of attacks on Jeeps around the world. First, they plan to leave out the part of the attack that rewrites the chips firmware; hackers following in their footsteps will have to reverse-engineer that element, a process that took Miller and Valasek months. But the code they publish will enable many of the dashboard hijinks they demonstrated on me as well as GPS tracking. Second, Miller and Valasek have been sharing their research with Chrysler for nearly nine months, enabling the company to quietly release a patch ahead of the Black Hat conference. On July 16, owners of vehicles with the Uconnect feature were notified of the patch in a post on Chryslers website that didnt offer any details or acknowledge Miller and Valaseks research. [Fiat Chrysler Automobiles] has a program in place to continuously test vehicles systems to identify vulnerabilities and develop solutions, reads a statement a Chrysler spokesperson sent to WIRED. FCA is committed to providing customers with the latest software updates to secure vehicles against any potential vulnerability. Unfortunately, Chryslers patch must be manually implemented via a USB stick or by a dealership mechanic. (Download the update here.) That means manyif not mostof the vulnerable Jeeps will likely stay vulnerable. Chrysler stated in a response to questions from WIRED that it appreciates Miller and Valaseks work. But the company also seemed leery of their decision to publish part of their exploit. Under no circumstances does FCA condone or believe its appropriate to disclose how-to information that would potentially encourage, or help enable hackers to gain unauthorized and unlawful access to vehicle systems, the companys statement reads. We appreciate the contributions of cybersecurity advocates to augment the industrys understanding of potential vulnerabilities. However, we caution advocates that in the pursuit of improved public safety they not, in fact, compromise public safety. The two researchers say that even if their code makes it easier for malicious hackers to attack unpatched Jeeps, the release is nonetheless warranted because it allows their work to be proven through peer review. It also sends a message: Automakers need to be held accountable for their vehicles digital security. If consumers dont realize this is an issue, they should, and they should start complaining to carmakers, Miller says. This might be the kind of software bug most likely to kill someone. In fact, Miller and Valasek arent the first to hack a car over the Internet. In 2011 a team of researchers from the University of Washington and the University of California at San Diego showed that they could wirelessly disable the locks and brakes on a sedan. But those academics took a more discreet approach, keeping the identity of the hacked car secret and sharing the details of the exploit only with carmakers. Miller and Valasek represent the second act in a good-cop/bad-cop routine. Carmakers who failed to heed polite warnings in 2011 now face the possibility of a public dump of their vehicles security flaws. The result could be product recalls or even civil suits, says UCSD computer science professor Stefan Savage, who worked on the 2011 study. Earlier this month, in fact, Range Rover issued a recall to fix a software security flaw that could be used to unlock vehicles doors. Imagine going up against a class-action lawyer after Anonymous decides it would be fun to brick all the Jeep Cherokees in California, Savage says. For the auto industry and its watchdogs, in other words, Miller and Valaseks release may be the last warning before they see a full-blown zero-day attack. The regulators and the industry can no longer count on the idea that exploit code wont be in the wild, Savage says. Theyve been thinking it wasnt an imminent danger you needed to deal with. That implicit assumption is now dead." 471,000 Hackable Automobiles Miller and Valaseks exploit uses a burner phones cellular connection to attack the Jeeps internet-connected entertainment system. Sitting on a leather couch in Millers living room as a summer storm thunders outside, the two researchers scan the Internet for victims. Uconnect computers are linked to the Internet by Sprints cellular network, and only other Sprint devices can talk to them. So Miller has a cheap Kyocera Android phone connected to his battered MacBook. Hes using the burner phone as a Wi-Fi hot spot, scouring for targets using its thin 3G bandwidth. A set of GPS coordinates, along with a vehicle identification number, make, model, and IP address, appears on the laptop screen. Its a Dodge Ram. Miller plugs its GPS coordinates into Google Maps to reveal that its cruising down a highway in Texarkana, Texas. He keeps scanning, and the next vehicle to appear on his screen is a Jeep Cherokee driving around a highway cloverleaf between San Diego and Anaheim, California. Then he locates a Dodge Durango, moving along a rural road somewhere in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. When I ask him to keep scanning, he hesitates. Seeing the actual, mapped locations of these unwitting strangers vehiclesand knowing that each one is vulnerable to their remote attackunsettles him. When Miller and Valasek first found the Uconnect flaw, they thought it might only enable attacks over a direct Wi-Fi link, confining its range to a few dozen yards. When they discovered the Uconnects cellular vulnerability earlier this summer, they still thought it might work only on vehicles on the same cell tower as their scanning phone, restricting the range of the attack to a few dozen miles. But they quickly found even that wasnt the limit. When I saw we could do it anywhere, over the Internet, I freaked out, Valasek says. I was frightened. It was like, holy fuck, thats a vehicle on a highway in the middle of the country. Car hacking got real, right then. That moment was the culmination of almost three years of work. In the fall of 2012, Miller, a security researcher for Twitter and a former NSA hacker, and Valasek, the director of vehicle security research at the consultancy IOActive, were inspired by the UCSD and University of Washington study to apply for a car-hacking research grant from Darpa. With the resulting $80,000, they bought a Toyota Prius and a Ford Escape. They spent the next year tearing the vehicles apart digitally and physically, mapping out their electronic control units, or ECUsthe computers that run practically every component of a modern carand learning to speak the CAN network protocol that controls them. When they demonstrated a wired-in attack on those vehicles at the DefCon hacker conference in 2013, though, Toyota, Ford, and others in the automotive industry downplayed the significance of their work, pointing out that the hack had required physical access to the vehicles. Toyota, in particular, argued that its systems were robust and secure against wireless attacks. We didnt have the impact with the manufacturers that we wanted, Miller says. To get their attention, theyd need to find a way to hack a vehicle remotely. Charlie Miller. So the next year, they signed up for mechanics accounts on the websites of every major automaker and downloaded dozens of vehicles technical manuals and wiring diagrams. Using those specs, they rated 24 cars, SUVs, and trucks on three factors they thought might determine their vulnerability to hackers: How many and what types of radios connected the vehicles systems to the Internet; whether the Internet-connected computers were properly isolated from critical driving systems, and whether those critical systems had cyberphysical componentswhether digital commands could trigger physical actions like turning the wheel or activating brakes. Based on that study, they rated Jeep Cherokee the most hackable model. Cadillacs Escalade and Infinitis Q50 didnt fare much better; Miller and Valasek ranked them second- and third-most vulnerable. When WIRED told Infiniti that at least one of Miller and Valaseks warnings had been borne out, the company responded in a statement that its engineers look forward to the findings of this [new] study and will continue to integrate security features into our vehicles to protect against cyberattacks. Cadillac emphasized in a written statement that the company has released a new Escalade since Miller and Valaseks last study, but that cybersecurity is an emerging area in which we are devoting more resources and tools, including the recent hire of a chief product cybersecurity officer. After Miller and Valasek decided to focus on the Jeep Cherokee in 2014, it took them another year of hunting for hackable bugs and reverse-engineering to prove their educated guess. It wasnt until June that Valasek issued a command from his laptop in Pittsburgh and turned on the windshield wipers of the Jeep in Millers St. Louis driveway. Since then, Miller has scanned Sprints network multiple times for vulnerable vehicles and recorded their vehicle identification numbers. Plugging that data into an algorithm sometimes used for tagging and tracking wild animals to estimate their population size, he estimated that there are as many as 471,000 vehicles with vulnerable Uconnect systems on the road. Pinpointing a vehicle belonging to a specific person isnt easy. Miller and Valaseks scans reveal random VINs, IP addresses, and GPS coordinates. Finding a particular victims vehicle out of thousands is unlikely through the slow and random probing of one Sprint-enabled phone. But enough phones scanning together, Miller says, could allow an individual to be found and targeted. Worse, he suggests, a skilled hacker could take over a group of Uconnect head units and use them to perform more scansas with any collection of hijacked computersworming from one dashboard to the next over Sprints network. The result would be a wirelessly controlled automotive botnet encompassing hundreds of thousands of vehicles. For all the critics in 2013 who said our work didnt count because we were plugged into the dashboard, Valasek says, well, now what? Congress Takes on Car Hacking Now the auto industry needs to do the unglamorous, ongoing work of actually protecting cars from hackers. And Washington may be about to force the issue. Later today, senators Markey and Blumenthal intend to reveal new legislation designed to tighten cars protections against hackers. The bill (which a Markey spokesperson insists wasnt timed to this story) will call on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the Federal Trade Commission to set new security standards and create a privacy and security rating system for consumers. Controlled demonstrations show how frightening it would be to have a hacker take over controls of a car, Markey wrote in a statement to WIRED. Drivers shouldnt have to choose between being connected and being protected
We need clear rules of the road that protect cars from hackers and American families from data trackers. Markey has keenly followed Miller and Valaseks research for years. Citing their 2013 Darpa-funded research and hacking demo, he sent a letter to 20 automakers, asking them to answer a series of questions about their security practices. The answers, released in February, show what Markey describes as a clear lack of appropriate security measures to protect drivers against hackers who may be able to take control of a vehicle. Of the 16 automakers who responded, all confirmed that virtually every vehicle they sell has some sort of wireless connection, including Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, cellular service, and radios. (Markey didnt reveal the automakers individual responses.) Only seven of the companies said they hired independent security firms to test their vehicles digital security. Only two said their vehicles had monitoring systems that checked their CAN networks for malicious digital commands. UCSDs Savage says the lesson of Miller and Valaseks research isnt that Jeeps or any other vehicle are particularly vulnerable, but that practically any modern vehicle could be vulnerable. I dont think there are qualitative differences in security between vehicles today, he says. The Europeans are a little bit ahead. The Japanese are a little bit behind. But broadly writ, this is something everyones still getting their hands around. Aside from wireless hacks used by thieves to open car doors, only one malicious car-hacking attack has been documented: In 2010 a disgruntled employee in Austin, Texas, used a remote shutdown system meant for enforcing timely car payments to brick more than 100 vehicles. But the opportunities for real-world car hacking have only grown, as automakers add wireless connections to vehicles internal networks. Uconnect is just one of a dozen telematics systems, including GM Onstar, Lexus Enform, Toyota Safety Connect, Hyundai Bluelink, and Infiniti Connection. In fact, automakers are thinking about their digital security more than ever before, says Josh Corman, the cofounder of I Am the Cavalry, a security industry organization devoted to protecting future Internet-of-things targets like automobiles and medical devices. Thanks to Markeys letter, and another set of questions sent to automakers by the House Energy and Commerce Committee in May, Corman says, Detroit has known for months that car security regulations are coming. But Corman cautions that the same automakers have been more focused on competing with each other to install new Internet-connected cellular services for entertainment, navigation, and safety. (Payments for those services also provide a nice monthly revenue stream.) The result is that the companies have an incentive to add Internet-enabled featuresbut not to secure them from digital attacks. Theyre getting worse faster than theyre getting better, he says. If it takes a year to introduce a new hackable feature, then it takes them four to five years to protect it. Cormans group has been visiting auto industry events to push five recommendations: safer design to reduce attack points, third-party testing, internal monitoring systems, segmented architecture to limit the damage from any successful penetration, and the same Internet-enabled security software updates that PCs now receive. The last of those in particular is already catching on; Ford announced a switch to over-the-air updates in March, and BMW used wireless updates to patch a hackable security flaw in door locks in January. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 7.
#1. To: cranky (#0)
Reminds me of that one gentleman Obama had killed because he was doing a story on Obama. What was his name? It was't Brietbart, he was killed by Obama with another method.
I missed that story. I thought this was news.
His name was Michael Hastings. www.westernjournalism.com...-linked-michael-hastings- murder/
Thanks. I read the story at Deckard's link. I have a hand held device that accesses my 2002 Tundra's diagnostic info. It can read and display diagnostic codes but that's about it. My truck is unhackable. To gain control of it requires a good old fashion carjacking. Being old and obsolete can be a blessing sometimes.
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