U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBT) purchased technology that vacuums up reams of personal information stored inside cars, according to a federal contract reviewed by The Intercept, illustrating the serious risks in connecting your vehicle and your smartphone.

The contract, shared with The Intercept by Latinx advocacy organization Mijente, shows that CBP paid Swedish data extraction firm MSAB $456,073 for a bundle of hardware including five iVe “vehicle forensics kits” manufactured by Berla, an American company. A related document indicates that CBP believed the kit would be “critical in CBP investigations as it can provide evidence [not only] regarding the vehicle’s use, but also information obtained through mobile devices paired with the infotainment system.”

Well this is an interesting new attack angle on smartphones and just shows the goalposts keep shifting.

See https://theintercept.com/2021/05/03/car-surveillance-berla-msab-cbp/

#technology #privacy #surveillance #iVe #forensics

  • GadgeteerZA@lemmy.mlOP
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    4 years ago

    That makes zero difference though to what gets synced to your car when you connect it. Only way is not to connect at all if one is worried about it.