Hacking ECU of heavy-duty vehicles (trucks, buses, etc.): How to attack the J1939 protocol at scale. 🚜🔧👨🏻💻🦠🎉
Senior Security Consultant Hannah Silva was one of the presenters at the Cyber Truck Challenge and shared some very interesting and practical methods for security assessment (hacking!) of ECUs in heavy-duty vehicles (trucks, buses, tractors, etc.).
SAE J1939 is the standard protocol for Controller Area Network (CAN) in commercial vehicles, which is rarely a focus of the car hacking community but is super interesting from an attacker’s perspective.
Grab the PDF and code and learn your way into the cybersecurity of every commercial vehicle out there. I wonder if modern tanks have a J1939 port.
More details:
Enumerating vulnerabilities in an ECU [PDF]: https://www.cybertruckchallenge.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Silva_Vehicle_Network_Security.pdf
TruckDevil Code [Github]: https://github.com/LittleBlondeDevil/TruckDevil
目录
最新
- Hacking Kia and Nissan cars remotely: the status of famous vulnerabilities after two years. 🚗🌎📱🔓🤑
- Hacking serial-to-IP industrial devices from Lantronix and Silex: attacking OT from the internet. 🏭📦🌐💉👷♂️
- Unlock your car’s hidden hacking potential: how to enable “Developer Mode” in Android Auto. 🚘📱👈🤫👑
- Hacking access-control systems with an old-school sniffer: a creative way to jump the fence. 🚪🔐👃💳🔓
- Hacking the Google Fast Pair protocol: Connect to 68% of headphones, earbuds, and cars (?).🎧🚙ᯤ👨🏻💻😱
- Hacking the diagnostics of Freightliner Cascadia heavy trucks: Denial-of-service attacks. 🚛🩺📊💉🔴
- Crash course in RF security research for hackers: cheap hardware and open-source software. 👨🏻💻📻၊၊||၊🎧👾
- Cybersecurity attacks on SIM cards: a wealth of useful info about SIM and cellular network hacking. 📱🎫👥📲💰