Hacking 20% of cars could freeze traffic (SmartCitiesDive)

A hack that affects a small number of internet-connected cars could completely gridlock Manhattan, according to a study from researchers at Georgia Institute of Technology and Multiscale Systems, Inc. The research was published in the journal Physical Review E. 

The paper found that randomly stalling 20% of cars during rush hour would stop traffic in Manhattan. Even a hack that affects 10% of cars at rush hour would create enough blockages to stop emergency vehicles from getting through traffic. 

The research suggests cities “split up the digital network influencing the cars to make it impossible to access too many cars through one network.”

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One comment

  1. Ah yes, the wonderful, about to make-everybody-happy “internet of Things” ( IoT ) … except it isn’t.
    Because the security on all/every single one of these is laughable. A mere gridlock traffic-jam, what are you worrying about? Given what hacked controls to your fridge, central heating & cooker could do – & these scenarios have been shown to be entirely plausible.
    See also “Smart Meters”

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