Nissan Leaf Cars Can Be Hacked Via a Web Link

Posted by at 8:15 am on February 25, 2016

Troy Hunt, a security researcher uncovered a vulnerability in the NissanConnect app, which can allow attackers to connect to a car if they know their car’s ID number. After that, they can hijack the car’s air conditioning and heating systems. The fault lies in the complete lack of authentication for the application that enhances the car’s dashboard with Internet-connected features.

The vehicle identification number (VIN), which is written on each Nissan Leaf’s windshield, can be copied by anyone that passes by that car. However, the VIN is composed of characters that refer to the brand, make of car, and the country where it was manufactured. Only the last five digits vary between different Leaf cars in the same region, so someone could just build a script to attack all of the Nissan Leafs in a given region.

“There’s nothing to stop someone from scripting a process that goes through every 100,000 possible cars and tries and turn the air conditioning on in every one,” said Troy Hunt. “They would then get a response that would confirm which vehicles exist.”

The security expert also noted that attackers don’t even need to use the NissanConnect app, because they can deliver the attack through a web browser by spoofing the app. The Australia-based researcher tested this on a Nissan owned by his friend Scott Helme, who lives in the U.K.

As I was talking to Troy on Skype, he pasted the web address into his browser and then maybe 10 seconds later I heard an internal beep in the car,” said Helme. “The heated seat then turned on, the heated steering wheel turned on. And I could hear the fans spin up and the air-conditioning unit turn on.” 

Hunt said that the test didn’t work when the car was in motion, but it did show theowner’s registered username, which could help reveal their identity. Times and distances of recent journeys were also revealed.

When Helme unregistered the app, Hunt’s attack no longer worked. This is why Hunt suggested that this vulnerability could be easily fixed if the company disables the ConnectNissan service.

The researcher said that although this isn’t a life-threatening attack, it could be used in ways that could put the cars’ owners in danger. For instance, if the attackers hijack the car this way, they could see over the course of a week where the driver goes to work, and then they could drain the car’s battery to make it so the driver can’t get back home.

Hunt alerted Nissan about the flaw a month ago, but so far he hasn’t gotten a proper response about it, so he decided to make it public to force the company to fix the issue. He said he has already seen some Canadian Leaf owners share information about this vulnerability online, so the issue is already out there, whether he would’ve kept it a secret or not.

This is why sometimes security researchers, who discover vulnerabilities in some products, can’t wait for the companies to provide a fix if it takes longer than a few months and it looks like they are dragging their feet. Usually, it’s not just one person that finds that vulnerability, but many others, who exploit it for their own purposes; therefore allowing the company to drag the process of fixing the issue doesn’t mean that others aren’t taking advantage of that vulnerability during that time.

This case also shows that although most car manufacturers are rapidly trying to build connected cars, electric vehicles that are almost completely controlled by software, and even self-driving cars, where the danger of software insecurity is even bigger, they aren’t taking security to need levels!

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