The Asian Age

Carmaker to pay upto $ 1,500 for spotting software bugs Fiat offers hackers cash for cyber threats

-

Detroit, July 13: Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s ( FCA) NV will offer rewards of as much as $ 1,500 to ethical hackers who tell the auto maker about data security weaknesses in its vehicles, the company said.

FCA’s move comes a year after independen­t cybersecur­ity researcher­s used a wireless connection to turn off a Jeep Cherokee’s engine.

The hack, reported in Wired Magazine, alarmed auto makers and regulators, and it led Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s to recall 1.4 million vehicles to prevent the use of a wireless connection to gain control of the vehicle.

FCA officials said Bugcrowd Inc of San Francisco, which manages similar programmes for a range of companies including Tesla Motors Inc will manage its “bug bounty” programme.

Casey Ellis, Bugcrowd’s chief executive, said in a media briefing that his company has 32,000 researcher­s that work through its service. Bugcrowd rates researcher­s based on the quality of their work, he said.

Auto makers have stepped up efforts to address concerns that vehicles equipped with high- speed internet connection­s could be vulnerable to cyber intruders and criminals who could seek to harvest personal data through vehicle systems, or perpetrate other mischief such as disabling a car and demanding a ransom to bring it back to life.

In July 2015, several major auto makers formed an Automotive Informatio­n Sharing and Analysis Centre, or AutoISAC, to serve as a clearing house for informatio­n about cyber threats.

The group said in a statement this week its members now account for 99 per cent of light duty vehicles on the road in North America.

Titus Melnyk, FCA senior manager for security architectu­re, said FCA could share informatio­n generated by the Bugcrowd programme with other automakers through the Auto- ISAC. “We’ll err on the side of what’s right for the industry,” he said in a briefing for reporters.

General Motors Co has a programme managed by San Francisco cybersecur­ity company Hackerone that offers recognitio­n, but not cash, to researcher­s who identify and share cybersecur­ity gaps with the company.

The company has also begun hiring outside cybersecur­ity experts and has a group of employees that test the company’s systems, Jeffrey Massimilla, General Motors’s chief product cybersecur­ity officer, told Reuters.

Mr Massimilla said GM may offer cash bounties to ethical hackers, but said, “If you put up a small bounty you aren’t going to get good research.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India