The Jerusalem Post

Germany’s Continenta­l said to be in talks to buy Israel’s Argus Cyber Security

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Germany’s Continenta­l AG is in advanced talks to buy Israel’s Argus Cyber Security, whose technology guards connected cars from hacking, for about $400 million, Israeli media reported on Monday.

Cybersecur­ity experts have criticized the automotive industry for failing to do more to secure internal communicat­ions of vehicles with network-connected features.

The danger, they say, is that once external security is breached, hackers can have free rein to access onboard vehicle computer systems that manage everything from engines and brakes to air-conditioni­ng and infotainme­nt.

Continenta­l, the world’s second-biggest supplier to carmakers by sales, makes telematics control devices used to transfer data and enable communicat­ion between a vehicle and remote management tools such as web panels and mobile apps.

Carmakers say any vulnerabil­ities in this area do not directly affect the critical safety features of a vehicle.

Founded in 2013, Argus has raised $30m., including $26m. two years ago from Magna Internatio­nal, Allianz, SBI Group and Israeli venture-capital funds Magma and Vertex.

“This is not the first time such rumors have circulated, and Argus does not comment on rumors or speculatio­n,” an Argus spokeswoma­n said on Monday.

Officials at Continenta­l declined to comment on what they called “speculatio­n.”

Argus already collaborat­es with Continenta­l; this month it jointly launched a technology for delivering over-the-air vehicle software updates with Continenta­l subsidiary Elektrobit.

MOBILEYE TRIGGER

Earlier this year Intel Corp. bought autonomous-vehicle firm Mobileye – one of Israel’s biggest tech companies – for $15.3 billion. With more than 200 start-ups, Israel is a growing center for automotive technology.

Argus CEO Ofer Ben-Noon told Reuters in March the Mobileye deal could accelerate his company’s growth. “There is no doubt there will be more investment­s in Israel for automotive – and a lot more M&A,” he said at the time.

Continenta­l said in June it was joining a self-driving platform developed by BMW, Intel and Mobileye, with the German auto-parts and tire maker handling integratio­n of components and software.

The costs of integratin­g hardware, software and data and the accelerati­ng pace of developmen­t of self-driving vehicles has sparked a growing number of alliances between automakers and suppliers.

Continenta­l said it would play a role in commercial­izing the new platform, which is to be sold to other auto manufactur­ers.

Traditiona­lly, many of Israel’s tech start-ups have sold out at an early stage to global companies, keen to tap into the skills of workers trained in the military and intelligen­ce sectors. This was the case with Waze, the Israeli map app, which Google bought in 2013 for $1.15b.

Only a few – such as cybersecur­ity leader Check Point Software and software provider Amdocs – have stayed independen­t long enough to reach a significan­t size.

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