The Atlantic

Car Hackers Are Out for Blood

The rise of “smartphones on wheels” is ushering in cybersecurity risks that have never before existed on America’s roads.
Source: Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Getty.

When a group of German hackers breached a Tesla, they weren’t out to remotely seize control of the car. They weren’t trying to access the owner’s WiFi passwords, nor did they want a way to steal credit-card numbers from a local electric-vehicle charging network.

Their target was its heated seats.

The Tesla in question was equipped with heated rear seats, but the feature is hidden behind a paywall and activated only after the driver . To get around that, three Ph.D. students from Technische Universität Berlin, along with an independent researcher (and the Tesla’s owner), say they that powers the car’s infotainment system. This allowed them to essentially glitch the computer, in the process gaining access to the rear heated seats free of charge. By “jailbreaking” the car, they were also able to access many of its internal systems and private user data. “We are not the evil outsider, but we’re actually the insider, we own the car,” one of the researchers told last month ahead of. “And we don’t want to pay these $300 for the rear-heated seats.”

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