• edric
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    10311 months ago

    This is like banning usb cables so Hyundai/Kia cars won’t be stolen, instead of forcing the car manufacturer to just install an actual immobilizer on affected vehicles. Seeing Hyundai/Kia do everything but install immobilizers is infuriating as well. They’re rolling out software updates, giving out wheel locks, installing cages on the ignition panel, etc. Literally everything but fix the problem.

    • @[email protected]
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      1011 months ago

      This is like banning usb cables

      If USB cables were used almost exclusively for illegal and just generally anti social behavior.

      I’d never heard of this thing, and it does sound fun, but this was the use case list from the paragraph calling it a “humble hobbyist device” doesn’t come across as very defensible:

      People can use them to change the channels of a TV at a bar covertly, clone simple hotel key cards, read the RFID chip implanted in pets, open and close some garage doors, and, until Apple issued a patch, send iPhones into a never-ending DoS loop.

      But also agreed on fuck those car companies that just don’t care and would rather weaponize the government than try to fix anything (without a subscription fee of course). Anti social behavior forced Kia to change their shitty grift of a product so 🤷

      • edric
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        5711 months ago

        exclusively for illegal and just generally anti social behavior.

        Except they aren’t. These devices are used for various non-illegal purposes and are actually helpful for pentesters so we can learn about potential vulnerabilities on wireless systems before they can be exploited by bad actors. The same way a usb cable is useful for transferring data and at the same time can be used for illegal stuff (like literally any hack where you connect to a device via usb). The worst part (and the article mentions it), is that it doesn’t even work on security systems on cars built since the 90’s. So they’re banning something that isn’t even a problem in the first place.

        • @[email protected]
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          411 months ago

          I totally get and agree this is a dumbfuck response to the problem they allege to be fixing, and hopefully their committee it whatever concludes the same, but the article didn’t mention any redeeming values for the device as you did

              • @[email protected]
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                210 months ago

                but the article didn’t mention any redeeming values for the device as you did

                This means the writer has a bias of negativity towards the device and now you are arguing that’s it’s a good thing it is being banned.

                You would vote to ban dihydrogen monoxide if you found it has been consumed by every murderer in existence and also has been found at every school shooting too

                • @[email protected]
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                  110 months ago

                  I said “this is a dumbfuck response to a problem they allege to be fixing and hopefully their committee concludes the same”.

                  Translation = it’s stupid to ban it.

                  I was giving credit to that other guy for listing some redeeming qualities of the device as the article did not.