A new GM patent outlines a way to track tire wear visually, potentially warning drivers before tread depth becomes a problem. GM patented a camera-based system to monitor tire wear, not just pressure.
Checking the air pressure of bike tires can be a hassle, particularly if you've got high-pressure tires that let out a gush ...
Tire Pressure Monitoring Systems (TPMS) use unencrypted wireless signals. Signals can send unique ID numbers that may allow tracking. A study collected data from over 20,000 cars using low-cost radio ...
Researchers at the IMDEA Networks Institute have found a vulnerability in the Tire Pressure Monitoring System (TPMS) used to monitor a car's tire pressures that could be used to track owners. The ...
Most people would never imagine that the innocuous tire pressure monitoring system (TPMS) in their vehicles could be used to track their movements. But, as with many things digital, it turns out the ...
StudyFinds on MSN
Tire sensors meant to prevent blowouts may also be broadcasting drivers’ private routines
In A Nutshell Researchers from several European institutions showed that the tire pressure sensors built into nearly every ...
Modern vehicle computer systems have become vectors for security and privacy hacking. However, who would've thought that the humble and not-very-high-tech tire pressure monitoring system (TPMS) would ...
Your car’s tire pressure system might be doing more than keeping you safe—it could be quietly broadcasting your location. A new study from researchers at the IMDEA Networks Institute in Madrid has ...
A new cybersecurity study from the IMDEA Networks Institute has uncovered a deeply unsettling reality: one of your car’s most basic safety systems may already be broadcasting your movements to anyone ...
We've known for a while that modern cars are exposed to all kinds of security risks, mainly due to how they transmit data. Security researchers at IMDEA Networks have recently come across a new ...
Aaron covers what's exciting and new in the world of home entertainment and streaming TV. Previously, he wrote about entertainment for places like Rotten Tomatoes, Inverse, TheWrap and The Hollywood ...
There seems to be no shortage of ways that our personal data can be tracked these days. If your phone, watch, eyeglasses, computer, and car listening to you weren't enough, researchers at the IMDEA ...
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