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posted by cmn32480 on Sunday July 24 2016, @01:46PM   Printer-friendly
from the not-just-locking-the-doors-anymore dept.

The Automotive Information Sharing and Analysis Center has published an executive summary of their Automotive Cybersecurity Best Practices.

From the summary

As vehicles become increasingly connected and autonomous, the security and integrity of automotive systems is a top priority for the automotive industry. The Proactive Safety Principles released in January 2016 demonstrate the automotive industry's commitment to collaboratively enhance the safety of the traveling public. The objective of the fourth Principle, "Enhance Automotive Cybersecurity," is to explore and employ ways to collectively address cyber threats that could present unreasonable safety or security risks. This includes the development of best practices to secure the motor vehicle ecosystem.

Unfortunately the public executive overview is somewhat content free and refers to NIST documents on security practices but something is better than nothing. It's been six years since the publication of Experimental Security Analysis of a Modern Automobile and five years since Comprehensive Experimental Analyses of Automotive Attack Surfaces . In those research papers compsci students splay open the control system of a car through standard security analysis techniques such as fuzzing. My favorite technique they used was to install custom software into the QNX powered OnStar device then use it to bridge between the body bus and the bus that handles the engines, brakes, steering, etc. Very clever indeed.

How does the community feel about the poorly secured two ton (metric or imperial, you pick) rolling robot that the modern vehicle has become?


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  • (Score: 2) by canopic jug on Sunday July 24 2016, @04:10PM

    by canopic jug (3949) on Sunday July 24 2016, @04:10PM (#379427) Journal
    There is apparently no security inside current automobiles. Every single electronic or automotive device is part of a giant, interconnected, unmanageable mess that is the networked environment. It would be somewhat less catastrophic if it were in any way isolated from the outside world, but it is connected to the outside via any number of radios, media players, USB ports, and other things. It's not anything that can be modified, upgraded, patched, kludged, or otherwise fixed short of a complete redesign from the basics upward. The situation is so severe that there are few write-ups with an overview. USENIX 2016 had a short presentation by Stefan Savage from UC San Diego [youtube.com] covering it though, if you can sit through it. It's getting harder to avoid the electronic cars as the old ones are less and less available on the used market.
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