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https://www.wired.com/story/kia-web-vulnerability-vehicle-hack-track/
A bug, found in the KIA website, allowed a hacker with nothing more than a license plate to access not only the vehicle's location, but it's location history as well as functions like unlocking it and starting it, honking the horn...etc. And this applied to basically any internet-connected KIA vehicle.
Researchers alerted Kia to the problem in June, at which point Kia implemented a fix.
More troubling is that this is the 2nd bug of this type that they've reported to Hyundai/KIA/Genesis within the last year. They've also found similar web vulnerabilities for Honda/Acura and Nissan/Infiniti as well as Toyota (and I'd assume Lexus).
Somewhat terrifying quote from the article:

A bug, found in the KIA website, allowed a hacker with nothing more than a license plate to access not only the vehicle's location, but it's location history as well as functions like unlocking it and starting it, honking the horn...etc. And this applied to basically any internet-connected KIA vehicle.
Researchers alerted Kia to the problem in June, at which point Kia implemented a fix.
More troubling is that this is the 2nd bug of this type that they've reported to Hyundai/KIA/Genesis within the last year. They've also found similar web vulnerabilities for Honda/Acura and Nissan/Infiniti as well as Toyota (and I'd assume Lexus).
Somewhat terrifying quote from the article:
“If someone cut you off in traffic, you could scan their license plate and then know where they were whenever you wanted and break into their car,” says Curry. “If we hadn’t brought this to Kia’s attention, anybody who could query someone’s license plate could essentially stalk them.” For Kias that come installed with a 360-degree camera, that camera, too, was accessible to hackers. Beyond allowing the hijacking of connected features in cars themselves, Curry says, the web portal flaw also allowed hackers to query a broad range of personal information about Kia customers—names, email addresses, phone numbers, home addresses, and even past driving routes in some cases—a potentially massive data leak.
