Originally published bySlashdot
Slashdot reader Bismillah shared this report from ITNews:
Research and development engineer Romain Marchand of Paris headquartered Quarkslab obtained a telematic control unit (TCU) from a salvage yard in Poland... Marchand tore down the TCU, which is based on a Qualcomm system on a chip, and extracted the Linux-based file system from the Micron multi-chip package (MCP) which contained NAND-based non-volatile storage memory. The non-volatile storage contained sensitive information, including system configuration data and more importantly, logs that revealed the vehicle's GPS positions over time.
None of that information was encrypted, Marchand told iTnews, which made it possible to collect and retrieve sensitive data of interest. What's more, the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) logs with GPS positions covered the BYD's full journey from the factory in China to its operational life in the United Kingdom, and to its final wrecking in Poland, Marchand explained in an analysis... The issue is not restricted to BYD, and Marchand added that the hardware architecture of the Chinese car maker's TCU is broadly similar to what can be found in other brands.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
🇺🇸
More news from United StatesUnited States
NORTH AMERICA
Related News
UCP Variant Data: The #1 Reason Agent Checkouts Fail
7h ago
Amazon Employees Are 'Tokenmaxxing' Due To Pressure To Use AI Tools
21h ago
How Braze’s CTO is rethinking engineering for the agentic area
11h ago

Décryptage technique : Comment builder un téléchargeur de vidéos Reddit performant (DASH, HLS & WebAssembly)
17h ago
How AI Reduced Manual Driver Verification by 75% — Operations Case Study. Part 2
4h ago