Hackers Can Unlock, Steal Your Vehicles – NCC Alerts Nigerians

Category: Tech News 



The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has alerted telecom consumers and members of the public about an ongoing cyber-vulnerability that allows a nearby hacker to unlock vehicles, start their engines wireless and make away with cars.

In a statement on Sunday, the NCC said “the fact that car remotes are categorized short range devices that make use of radio frequency (RF) to lock and unlock cars informed the need for the Commission to alert the general public on this emergent danger, where hackers take advantage to unlock and start a compromised car.”

The Director of Public Affairs at the NCC, Ikechukwu Adinde, said, “According to the latest advisory released by the Computer Security Incident Response Team (CSIRT), the Cybersecurity Centre for the telecom sector established by the NCC, the vulnerability is a Man-in-the-Middle (MitM) attack or, more specifically, a replay attack in which an attacker intercepts the RF signals normally sent from a remote key fob to the car, manipulates these signals, and re-sends them later to unlock the car at will.

“With this latest type of cyber-attack, it is also possible to manipulate the captured commands and re-transmit them to achieve a different outcome altogether.

“Multiple researchers disclosed a vulnerability, which is said to be used by a nearby attacker to unlock some Honda and Acura car models and start their engines wirelessly.

The attack consists of a threat actor capturing the radio frequency (RF) signals sent from your key fob to the car and re-sending these signals to take control of your car’s remote key-less entry system,” the advisory stated emphatically.

“However, the NCC-CSIRT, in the advisory, has offer some precautionary measures or solutions that can be adopted by car owners to prevent falling victim to the attack.”

Mr Adinde also quoted the cyber-alert unit of the NCC as saying, “When affected, the only mitigation is to reset your key fob at the dealership.

Besides, the affected car manufacturer may provide a security mechanism that generate fresh codes for each authentication request, this makes it difficult for an attacker to ‘replay’ the codes thereafter.

Additionally, vulnerable car users should store their key fobs in signal-blocking ‘Faraday pouches’ when not in use.”

No comments

Powered by Blogger.