China’s secret services could use sensors and cameras in the cars to monitor secure areas, wiretap passenger conversations and access phones that are plugged into the vehicle, CSRI senior policy director Sam Goodman said.
China’s secret services could use sensors and cameras in the cars to monitor secure areas, wiretap passenger conversations and access phones that are plugged into the vehicle, CSRI senior policy director Sam Goodman said.
I think your view on what happened is based on media headlines rather than the actual technical facts.
https://soundofdevelopment.substack.com/p/volkswagen-data-leak-location-tracking
That is the major configuration problem that got the data accesible
That is the first configuration problem, to collect this data in the first place and then to collect it down to this level of precision.
This remains with the major architectural problem.
All this data is stored in one place. Leaving aside the discussion of whether this data should be collected in the first place, there would be a strong reason to separate the data supposedly collected for technical analysis from the data that identifies who owns the car. Of course in the case of location data down to 10cm accuracy that is a bit moot as you can get the home address easily from the location data.
Please let me know if there was something i missed regarding my assessment of two configuration problems and one architectural problem.
Yeah, you missed how this is absolutely nothing like “we wank to you in-car videofeed”-Tesla and “we spy for the Chinese government”-BYD
A security hole exposing data that the users have agreed to share is nothing like companies willfully breaking user integrity.
You know this of course, you just don’t like being corrected.