490
Revealed: car industry was warned keyless vehicles vulnerable to theft a decade ago
(www.theguardian.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
To be fair, I think we ignore the security of physical locks. Atleast one must get physical access to the lock in order to pick it.
Or even password books. Atleast someone has to get physical access to said book, which requires knowing it exists in the first place.
Does that make them better? No, not imo, but it is an aspect of these things that often gets overlooked
It's a fair point, but if we're taking about cars, I'd say physical access is a given. Keyless vehicles haven't quite enabled remote car thefts just yet
I’d also like to point out that most modern vehicles use rolling codes to prevent replay attacks. I’ve only recently learned this as I was concerned about devices like the Flipper making these sorts of techniques to people that otherwise would lack the expertise to put such a device together themselves
They can also take into account the time it takes to travel from the request to the response so if you're 2x the distance away with a relay that somehow works in the middle, it would take too long and be rejected.
This is lockpickinglawyer and today I'm going to show you picking 100 locks in 100 seconds
This is the LockpickingLawyer and today I'll show you just how easily I can pick the door to the bunker you're hiding in. And there we have it.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
And there we have it.
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
The fuck?