Volkswagen leak exposed location of 800,000 electric car drivers for months


A data leak at Volkswagen software subsidiary Cariad exposed personal data, including location data, of hundreds of thousands of electric vehicle owners, according to a report from Der Spiegel.

The leak was discovered by an unnamed whistleblower, who shared the vulnerability with the Chaos Computer Club (a European hacker association) and Der Spiegel. The outlet was then able to test that the leak is real by tracking the cars of German politicians Nadja Weippert and Markus Grübel, who agreed to have their data accessed by reporters.

SEE ALSO:

CES 2025: 5 car trends we expect to see

The leak affected roughly 800,000 Volkswagen, Audi, Seat, and Skoda electric cars, but for roughly 460,000 of them, including Volkswagen’s ID.3 and ID.4 models, the data was very detailed, and included locations where the car was switched on and off.

According to the report, accessing this data was fairly easy and did not require very complex hacking methods. The data was apparently stored in unprotected and unencrypted Amazon cloud storage.

Mashable Light Speed

Some of the people affected by the leak include German politicians, business leaders, and the Hamburg police.

Der Spiegel notified Cariad about the leak, which was subsequently patched. Fortunately, while the leak enabled basically anyone to track EV owners’ locations for months, there is no evidence of anyone having done that. Cariad told Der Spiegel that EV owners don’t need to take any steps to protect their data from prying eyes.

As for Volkswagen, the company claims that accessing the data was not as easy as it seemed, and that it required “a high level of expertise and a considerable investment of time.”

SEE ALSO:

Volkswagen makes huge bet on electric vehicles

Still, this is a major embarrassment for the German automaker, which has barely recovered from the 2015 Dieselgate scandal, in which it was discovered that the company programmed some of its diesel engines to show lower emissions during laboratory testing than they would have in normal use. The new data leak probably won’t help Volkswagen’s EV sales, which haven’t been great in recent months.





Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

LATEST POSTS

Jiggly Caliente, drag queen who gained national prominence on “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” dies at age 44

Jiggly Caliente, a beloved drag queen who competed on "RuPaul's Drag Race" and transgender rights activist, has died at the age...

India, As Fastest Growing Economy, Is Ideal Investment Destination: RBI Governor | Economy News

Washington: India is expected to record a robust 6.5 per cent growth in the current financial year despite a tremendous increase in uncertainty and...

4chan is back online, says it’s been ‘starved of money’

4chan is partly back online after a hack took the infamous image-sharing site down for nearly two weeks. The site first went down on April...

Follow us

653FansLike
201FollowersFollow
467SubscribersSubscribe

Most Popular