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Fiat Chrysler recalls 1.4 million cars after hack revelations

Photo: CBS News

LONDON — Fiat Chrysler announced it has decided to voluntarily recall more than 1.4 million U.S. vehicles after it was revealed one of its Jeeps could be hacked.

The entire recall was issued after a video appeared online Tuesday showing two computer experts hacking into the car’s internet-connected radio.

The hackers were not only able to hack into the system, but they also took over the Jeep’s controls including brakes and steering.

“The recall aligns with an ongoing software distribution that insulates connected vehicles from remote manipulation, which, if unauthorized, constitutes criminal action,” the company said in a statement.

Drivers who own the vehicles don’t have to wait for parts to come in or even turn in their cars in order to get the problem fixed.

The company said instead customers can receive a USB device which will upgrade the software in the car.

The customer’s dealer could also do it as well.

The company said it also has “applied network-level security measures to prevent the type of remote manipulation demonstrated in a recent media report.”

The measures, it said, block remote access to certain vehicle systems and were fully tested and implemented within the cellular network on Thursday.

The company said it was unaware of any injuries related to the “software exploitation.”

Earlier this week, cybersecurity experts Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek showed they could remotely take control of a Jeep driven by a Wired reporter.

Their success comes as cars are getting smarter and hacking these complex systems is becoming an increasing concern in the auto industry.

The two, who work as ethical hackers, were miles away using the Internet to get inside the Jeep’s “info-tainment” system, which controls its radio and navigation systems.

From there, they were able to move to a different processor that was involved in in-vehicle communication including braking and steering.

Miller and Valasek estimate as many as 471,000 vehicles, including Jeeps using Fiat-Chrysler’s Uconnect system, could be vulnerable.

The vehicles affected by the recall include the following:

Customers can input their Vehicle Identification Numbers (VINs) at the Uconnect website to determine if their vehicles are included in the recall.

In February, “60 Minutes” showed the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) was able to use a laptop to take over a car.

DARPA is trying to develop hack-proof vehicles and provided funding for Miller and Valasek’s three-year effort.

Following the Wired report, Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey told CBS News that motorists should anticipate that hackers will target vehicles.

The senator is now introducing legislation to require cybersecurity and privacy protections be applied to vehicles.

 

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