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Car Theft Via Texting: Vehicle's Alarm May Be Weak Link

JORDAN ROBERTSON   08/19/11 11:12 AM ET   AP

SAN FRANCISCO — Texting and driving don't go well together – though not in the way you might think.

Computer hackers can force some cars to unlock their doors and start their engines without a key by sending specially crafted messages to a car's anti-theft system. They can also snoop at where you've been by tapping the car's GPS system.

That is possible because car alarms, GPS systems and other devices are increasingly connected to cellular telephone networks and thus can receive commands through text messaging. That capability allows owners to change settings on devices remotely, but it also gives hackers a way in.

Researchers from iSEC Partners recently demonstrated such an attack on a Subaru Outback equipped with a vulnerable alarm system, which wasn't identified. With a laptop perched on the hood, they sent the Subaru's alarm system commands to unlock the doors and start the engine.

Their findings show that text messaging is no longer limited to short notes telling friends you're running late or asking if they're free for dinner.

Texts are a powerful means of attack because the devices that receive them generally cannot refuse texts and the commands encoded in them. Users can't block texts; only operators of the phone networks can.

These devices are assigned phone numbers just like fax machines. So if you can find the secret phone number attached to a particular device, you can throw it off by sending your own commands through text messaging.

Although these numbers are only supposed to be known by the devices' operators, they aren't impossible to find. Certain network-administration programs allow technicians to probe networks to see what kinds of devices are on them. Based on the format of the responses, the type and even model of the device can be deduced. Hackers can use that information to craft attacks against devices they know are vulnerable. (In this case, the researchers bypassed these steps and simply took the alarm system out of the car to identify the secret phone number.)

Actually stealing a car wouldn't be so easy.

You'd have to ensure that the phone number you found is attached to the car you're standing in front of, for instance. There are hacking tools to do that – they listen for cellular traffic around a particular vehicle – but in many cases it's easier to take a car that doesn't have an alarm.

The research from Don Bailey and Mat Solnik is unsettling because it shows that such attacks are possible on a variety of other devices that use wireless communications chips. Those include ATMs, medical devices and even traffic lights. Hackers have already sent specially crafted texts with commands to instantly disconnect iPhones from the cellular network.

Bailey, whose specialty is cellphone network security, also found that similar techniques can be used to get a certain type of GPS system to cough up its location data. Such information can be used by stalkers or home burglars, for instance.

The type of GPS system he studied is known as assisted GPS, which means that it uses cellular signals in addition to the usual satellite signals. That makes the system vulnerable.

The research isn't just about taking off with someone else's car or finding out where that person has been.

It raises the possibility of other, more sinister dangers, such as those potentially affecting braking and acceleration, said Scott Borg, director of the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit, a group that studies hacking threats. That becomes possible as networked electronics are more tightly coupled with physical machinery.

"Doing one that is harmful is quite hard, but we need to prepare for people doing that," Borg said.

The research got the attention of a trade group for electric utilities, the North American Electric Reliability Corp. After the pair showed off the techniques at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas this month, the group warned that the types of wireless chips exploited by the pair are also used at power plants and said that more caution is needed in their use.

The vulnerable GPS system was made by Zoombak Inc., which promotes its products' usefulness in tracking children and automobiles. The company said it has made changes to its devices, so that outside parties can no longer get location data without passwords.

Bailey and Solnik are working with the manufacturer of the car alarm system to fix its vulnerabilities. Bailey said the unidentified manufacturer has fixed many of the security issues.

Bailey said stricter security standards are needed.

"We're so excited to use technology that we're deploying it too quickly and not really thinking about the impact of security," he said.

___

Online:

Video demonstration of attack: http://bit.ly/n6axTv

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SAN FRANCISCO — Texting and driving don't go well together – though not in the way you might think. Computer hackers can force some cars to unlock their doors and start their engines with...
SAN FRANCISCO — Texting and driving don't go well together – though not in the way you might think. Computer hackers can force some cars to unlock their doors and start their engines with...
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SevenUPtheUNCOOLA
give me reproductive freedom or give me death
08:53 AM on 08/27/2011
they will need a laptop and a brick to get into mine, i don't have power locks. guess theyll have to have old fashioned hot-wiring skillz too. not everyone has a cell phone either, and not every cell phone has text capabilities. and gps? the only mapping system i use is a an atlas underneath the front passenger seat. boy the assumptions are flyin arent they.
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IamYourDrillThrall
You can't be pro-war & pro-life.
08:07 PM on 08/21/2011
Never set your GPS 'home' to your real address...instead, program the nearest police station. Just a tip.
01:27 PM on 09/12/2011
Brilliant! IAYDT
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05:46 PM on 08/21/2011
There will always be curious folks who like to fiddle and make technology their own. Thank goodness for them :3

"We are as gods and we might as well get good at it."
--Stewart Brand
12:49 PM on 08/21/2011
Everyone is looking at this the wrong way. Freelance OnStar business will popup nationwide. Find you keys still in the ignition after shopping at the mall? No problem. Free agents with laptops will litter the mall rat infested parallel universe known as "the mall". Problem solved.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dilemma Onassis
The one you listen to when you're tired of failure
04:44 PM on 08/20/2011
the more technology advances, the easier it will be to have your information compromised. some things were never meant to be digitized.
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Morgantheaxe
Eisenhower Republicans don't drink tea!!
02:52 AM on 08/20/2011
Sooooo how bout that car jacking app?
01:28 PM on 09/12/2011
I think Smith and Wesson may make one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
04:56 PM on 08/19/2011
And have that warmed up when I get there.
03:48 PM on 08/19/2011
Why don't you use an iphone in the picture....they are the one's with tracking problems! Very lame HP!....how many times are you going to mislead people with your inaccurate headlines....really starting to fell like Fox!
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Morgantheaxe
Eisenhower Republicans don't drink tea!!
02:51 AM on 08/20/2011
Really aren't up on that issue are you? Turns out the data from an iphone stays on the iphone but and android smartphone can be coaxed to give it up.
01:46 PM on 08/19/2011
A thief is a thief and he's going to steal your car whether your door's locked, window's down, or alarm set.

www.omnique.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
heroine addict
habitual goddess worship
01:41 PM on 08/19/2011
Enough demonizing texting or any new technology that allows humans to do the same things they have always done, only more efficiently.

We, unlike most earth life forms are tool users. It's nothing new, in fact, it's about the oldest news around.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsgaetano
Legum servi sumus ut liberi esse possimus
01:21 PM on 08/19/2011
Better living through technology...
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12:45 PM on 08/19/2011
Python, Viper and Hornet brands have this problem.
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Brenda Starr
Time is before us. Time is after us.
10:56 AM on 08/19/2011
What's that text number? I wish someone would steal MY car!! :)
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imtruthmonger
Bacteria are more interesting than the GOP
10:47 AM on 08/19/2011
If only police were then able to hack a stolen car's on-board computer system, lock it's doors and drive itself directly to jail with the crook inside. Sounds like a real opportunity for enterprising programmers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsgaetano
Legum servi sumus ut liberi esse possimus
01:21 PM on 08/19/2011
Actually, I believe OnStar can turn the engine off. Not quite the same thing, but self-driving cars are being worked on.
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10:37 AM on 08/19/2011
Reality check: No one with the intelligence to do this is going to be stealing cars, and no one spealing cars is going to have the intelligence to do this. The only thing to be concerned about is what the article mentions about what this type of hacking may soon lead to.
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captainindustry
then that will be my story.
10:54 AM on 08/19/2011
For Sale on Ebay

New BLACK BOX security device that will start a car and open the door for you from a distance of 100 yards. Just push one button!!! Works particularly well on Escalades and Lexus and M. Benz.

((Disclaimer!! This security device is to be used ON YOUR CAR ONLY!!!))
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dnietz
politics is obsolete
11:53 AM on 08/19/2011
exactly
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dnietz
politics is obsolete
11:55 AM on 08/19/2011
And what makes you think that there aren't techs with skills that would be willing to sell their services to setup and train a group of thieves?

You think gangs and mafia type organizations don't IT staff just like a company?