529
Revealed: car industry was warned keyless vehicles vulnerable to theft a decade ago
(www.theguardian.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Could anyone with more knowledge confirm, but couldn't they just do what some car companies are doing and have a system by which you can just disable keyless entry when it's parked up at night?
If I'm at home and my car is parked up where the key could potentially be repeated then I just disable it by locking the car using the key and tapping on the door handle, which disables just tapping the door handle to unlock it again, and only the unlock button on the key works. As far as I understand it resolves this issue, unless I'm missing something?
That won't work for human reasons: few people will remember to lock the car that way at night-
That's a very simple process, I'm sure people would be more than happy to do that on available vehicles.
Have you met any non-technical people?
In my mom's basement? No.