18. May 2022

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CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents

Hackers can remotely unlock millions of digital locks around the world, including those on Tesla cars, due to a flaw in Bluetooth technology, according to a cybersecurity firm. 

NCC Group researcher Sultan Qasim Khan was able to open and then drive a Tesla using a small relay device tied to a laptop, which spanned a wide gap between the Tesla and the Tesla owner’s phone, according to a video shared with Reuters.

“This proves that any product relying on a trusted BLE connection is vulnerable to attacks even from the other side of the world,” the UK-based firm said in a statement, referring to the Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) protocol – technology used in millions of cars and smart locks which automatically open when in close proximity to an authorised device. 

Although Khan demonstrated the hack on a Tesla Model Y from 2021, NCC NSE 0.23 percent Group claims that any smart lock that uses BLE technology, including residential smart locks, may be unlocked in the same way. A request for comment from Tesla was not immediately returned. 

“In effect, systems that people rely on to guard their cars, homes, and private data are using Bluetooth proximity authentication mechanisms that can be easily broken with cheap off-the-shelf hardware,” the firm stated. “This research illustrates the danger of

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