Watch CBS News

Seen At 11: Staying A Step Ahead Of Car Hackers

NEW YORK(CBSNewYork) -- High-tech features like crash avoidance systems and auto-assisted parking are convenient options for anybody in the market for a new car, but they are also leading to a new series of concerns.

Imagine if those features allowed someone else to remotely take over your steering wheel, brakes, or warning lights. The practice is called car hacking and it may only be a matter of time before someone uses it to do something malicious.

Chris Valasek is the Director of Security Intelligence for the firm IOActive, and hacks computers for a living to expose security risks. He told CBS 2's Tony Aiello that today's cars give him a lot to work with.

"I can tell you you're going 199-mph now even though that's quite apparently not the case," he said.

Valasek and his partner can hack into a car's electronic control units and take over the vehicle. Some cars have more than 30 of the tiny computers inside of them.

"We were able to take control of the brakes, the steering wheel, the headlamps, the seat belts we could tighten them," he said, "We could engage the brakes and no matter what you did you couldn't move the car."

For this demonstration Valasek was plugged directly into the dashboard with a laptop computer.

"So, imagine being able to exploit these remotely and stopping a whole series of cars during rush hour," he said, "You could remotely wreck someone, or remotely stop the car."

Remote access is a danger that researchers at schools, including Rutgers, are looking at especially as car makers stuff even more technology into their vehicles.

Tire pressure monitors have been required in most cars since 2008. Marco Gruteser was able to hack the pressure monitors and researchers were able to capture the monitor signal and trigger a dashboard warning light.

"And make the car think the tires are flat when they are not," Gruteser said.

Low tire pressure may be the least of drivers' concerns.

"Theoretically it is possible to cause accidents," Gruteser explained.

Some people think that it may have already happened. LAPD investigators ruled out foul play after a controversial journalist was killed in a fiery one-car wreck, but a former terror adviser to President Bush speculated that the accident was consistent with car-hacking.

"Governments, nation states, they definitely have the resources to do things like that. Probably criminal organizations as well," Valasek said.

Researchers say car makers need to step on it, to stay a step ahead of the hackers. Auto makers have said that they are aware of the danger and are working to make car electronics more secure.

You May Also Be Interested In These Stories

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.