Securing Connected Vehicles End to End

2014-01-0300

04/01/2014

Event
SAE 2014 World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
As vehicles become increasingly connected with the external world, they face a growing range of security vulnerabilities. Researchers, hobbyists, and hackers have compromised security keys used by vehicles' electronic control units (ECUs), modified ECU software, and hacked wireless transmissions from vehicle key fobs and tire monitoring sensors. Malware can infect vehicles through Internet connectivity, onboard diagnostic interfaces, devices tethered wirelessly or physically to the vehicle, malware-infected aftermarket devices or spare parts, and onboard Wi-Fi hotspot. Once vehicles are interconnected, compromised vehicles can also be used to attack the connected transportation system and other vehicles. Securing connected vehicles impose a range of unique new challenges. This paper describes some of these unique challenges and presents an end-to-end cloud-assisted connected vehicle security framework that can address these challenges.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2014-01-0300
Pages
11
Citation
Zhang, T., Antunes, H., and Aggarwal, S., "Securing Connected Vehicles End to End," SAE Technical Paper 2014-01-0300, 2014, https://doi.org/10.4271/2014-01-0300.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 1, 2014
Product Code
2014-01-0300
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English