- cross-posted to:
- privacy@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- privacy@lemmy.ml
Israeli companies have developed and are selling advanced cyber tools that can hack into the tech of your car and use it to collect intelligence on you.
These tools can also assist in a cross-referencing of data to identify an intelligence target among tens of thousands of cars on the road. This technology can track the vehicle’s movements in real time and potentially eavesdrop on the people inside.
archive: https://archive.is/tDOFi
Would love to know of a resource for looking up the amount of telemetry being collected by make/model/year. Like, is this stuff only on cars with Android Auto/Apple CarPlay/inbuilt GPS, or anything that uses Bluetooth?
jokes on them, my car is offline only
My car is from 2015 with no working app connectivity. So good luck tracking that.
They’ll track me through my phone instead.
okay_meme.jpgI never signed up for the Hyundai BlueLink thing. The dealership pushed it - hard.
“It used to be free for the first year and $40/year after, now it’s free for life, so why not do it?”
“You can start your car in the office and let it warm up outside!”
“The sales agent will get in trouble if you don’t activate BlueLink!”
Well, I never activated so hopefully, whatever driving metrics it’s gathering aren’t directly associated with me. (One day I may dig under the hood and try to find the cell antenna and disconnect it.)




