Keyless security issues
Keyless security issues
Folks,
We have had a number of threads running recently talking about the theft of vehicles with keyless systems. As these increase in number, it becomes more dificult to track the comments so I have decided to set-up a sticky thread to allow you to comment and report on such issues in a single place so that there is an easily tracked file for future use.
This is also in response to an article in today's Sunday Times In Gear magazine which reports on such issues and refers to BMW specifically. The article can be found on page 2 of the magazine and I have lifted a couple of paragraphs which may be of interest:
Thieves find new ways to drive away keyless cars
"Car makers have launched an investigation after a second security loophole involving keyless cars was exposed in just over a year. Police have found that thieves can program a blank key fob in seconds using equipment sold online, then use it to drive the car away ...
...Briggs [Mike Briggs, vehicle security manager at Thatcham] began an investigation with the police and the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) after a stolen car was recovered. Police found a fob they believe was made by "cloning", the technique thought to be behind a spate of BMW thefts in northeast London. BMW is aware of the issue and awaits Thatcham's findings...
..The SMMT believes keyless-vehicle thefts are on a small scale but cannot provide figures. Investigation findings should be out in mid-July"
(c) Sunday Times, author Dominic Tobin, 20th May 2012
What is of greatest relevance here is that the article states that BMW are aware of the problem - which flies in the face of the "fobbing off" (excuse the pun) that members here have received recently regarding this issue.
Whilst it is clearly a BMW issue, it is important that ALPINA are aware of our concerns so that they can put pressure on BMW as necessary - given that our cars rely on a BMW security system that is being questioned as flawed. That being the case, may I ask that you try and keep your comments factual and rational so that the thread represents a sensible and appropriate response to the problem from customers.
Please feel free to add links to previous threads as reference and also to comment as appropriate. The purpose of this thread is to raise awareness of the issue and to allow us to prepare a file for ALPINA and/or BMW in the future, if needs be.
Over to you ...
We have had a number of threads running recently talking about the theft of vehicles with keyless systems. As these increase in number, it becomes more dificult to track the comments so I have decided to set-up a sticky thread to allow you to comment and report on such issues in a single place so that there is an easily tracked file for future use.
This is also in response to an article in today's Sunday Times In Gear magazine which reports on such issues and refers to BMW specifically. The article can be found on page 2 of the magazine and I have lifted a couple of paragraphs which may be of interest:
Thieves find new ways to drive away keyless cars
"Car makers have launched an investigation after a second security loophole involving keyless cars was exposed in just over a year. Police have found that thieves can program a blank key fob in seconds using equipment sold online, then use it to drive the car away ...
...Briggs [Mike Briggs, vehicle security manager at Thatcham] began an investigation with the police and the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) after a stolen car was recovered. Police found a fob they believe was made by "cloning", the technique thought to be behind a spate of BMW thefts in northeast London. BMW is aware of the issue and awaits Thatcham's findings...
..The SMMT believes keyless-vehicle thefts are on a small scale but cannot provide figures. Investigation findings should be out in mid-July"
(c) Sunday Times, author Dominic Tobin, 20th May 2012
What is of greatest relevance here is that the article states that BMW are aware of the problem - which flies in the face of the "fobbing off" (excuse the pun) that members here have received recently regarding this issue.
Whilst it is clearly a BMW issue, it is important that ALPINA are aware of our concerns so that they can put pressure on BMW as necessary - given that our cars rely on a BMW security system that is being questioned as flawed. That being the case, may I ask that you try and keep your comments factual and rational so that the thread represents a sensible and appropriate response to the problem from customers.
Please feel free to add links to previous threads as reference and also to comment as appropriate. The purpose of this thread is to raise awareness of the issue and to allow us to prepare a file for ALPINA and/or BMW in the future, if needs be.
Over to you ...
Charles
Teacher of Chemistry and driver of ALPINAs - not necessarily in that order
B3S Touring (49/116) - been to the moon and now on the way back!
Renault Grand Espace - not mine but the wife's!
Teacher of Chemistry and driver of ALPINAs - not necessarily in that order
B3S Touring (49/116) - been to the moon and now on the way back!
Renault Grand Espace - not mine but the wife's!
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- ALPINA
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- Location: Scunthorpe
scarily easy with the right equipment!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oz9vmlRy_qg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oz9vmlRy_qg
Someone has cracked the protocol which BMW are using. BMW must be or working on a fix for this bug – a software update from BMW in the future should fix this. In the meantime BW Auto Repairs can either patch or fix this bug.
Oscar Wilde & Burkard Bovensiepen: I have the simplest tastes. I am always satisfied with the best.
ALPINA B3 3.2 Coupe Switch-Tronic ALPINA Blue
ALPINA B10 3.3 Saloon Manual Mora Metallic
ALPINA B3 3.2 Coupe Switch-Tronic ALPINA Blue
ALPINA B10 3.3 Saloon Manual Mora Metallic
With so many cars going missing, including the B5 touring and 6 1M's in a month, three cars a week for one insurance assessor and one 24h old F10 the correct phrase to use would be 'epidemic'.
A long PH thread on it.
Here's a few videos of how the locks are pickable
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jjb6WVGaMyg&
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjjkabA1WLk
Of course, cars stopped getting stolen not because the locks improved, but because they couldn't start them afterwards.
Here's a CAS car (without a proper key blade) getting stolen.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVmPfCFFkqQ
The story goes that anything over M sport is being stolen, with black X5/X6 going to places like South Africa complete, and the 320d M sports are being broken for parts.
There was a software update made available 6 months ago, but since brand new F10s are going, it's not sufficient. Since a software update reportedly takes a ridiculous 4 hours, the solution is still not in sight.
Those that have had one car taken and two replacements also the day after thy arrived will be facing some crippling insurance premiums in the future.
A long PH thread on it.
Here's a few videos of how the locks are pickable
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jjb6WVGaMyg&
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjjkabA1WLk
Of course, cars stopped getting stolen not because the locks improved, but because they couldn't start them afterwards.
Here's a CAS car (without a proper key blade) getting stolen.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVmPfCFFkqQ
The story goes that anything over M sport is being stolen, with black X5/X6 going to places like South Africa complete, and the 320d M sports are being broken for parts.
There was a software update made available 6 months ago, but since brand new F10s are going, it's not sufficient. Since a software update reportedly takes a ridiculous 4 hours, the solution is still not in sight.
Those that have had one car taken and two replacements also the day after thy arrived will be facing some crippling insurance premiums in the future.
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- ALPINA
- Posts: 1392
- Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2010 8:16 pm
- Location: Scunthorpe
I'm so glad at this point that a certain emo was added Niel and the likes can reprimand me later for abuse of emo's but this is totally unacceptable.
That letter is nothing but a smoke screen to fob off the numpty punter and it makes me sick to my gut that an honest,hard working person can have their pride and joy stolen by counter electronics in the hand of what is in effect a one brain cell chav,WTF is going on when a chav/crim can outwit all the eggheads that make/produce and program these so called high tech security devices
That letter is nothing but a smoke screen to fob off the numpty punter and it makes me sick to my gut that an honest,hard working person can have their pride and joy stolen by counter electronics in the hand of what is in effect a one brain cell chav,WTF is going on when a chav/crim can outwit all the eggheads that make/produce and program these so called high tech security devices
On a mission to burn as much fossil fuel as possible before it runs out.
- DonFlintoni
- ALPINA
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- Location: Cotswolds
I hear and share your frustrations Del but its hardly likely to be your averge burberry wearing chav thats doing this. More like eastern europe organised crime gangs.dellboy 1959 wrote:I'm so glad at this point that a certain emo was added Niel and the likes can reprimand me later for abuse of emo's but this is totally unacceptable.
That letter is nothing but a smoke screen to fob off the numpty punter and it makes me sick to my gut that an honest,hard working person can have their pride and joy stolen by counter electronics in the hand of what is in effect a one brain cell chav,WTF is going on when a chav/crim can outwit all the eggheads that make/produce and program these so called high tech security devices
Former Alpina owner. Having a break.
With the gear costing just a few hundred Euros on eBay, which you'd make back on your first X5, gangs and one-man-shows are equally involved. The gangs though are the ones that are likely to target the rare stuff, rather than the local stuff.DonFlintoni wrote:I hear and share your frustrations Del but its hardly likely to be your averge burberry wearing chav thats doing this. More like eastern europe organised crime gangs.
- DonFlintoni
- ALPINA
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- Location: Cotswolds
The problem is not nicking them, its what you do with them once nicked.joylove wrote:With the gear costing just a few hundred Euros on eBay, which you'd make back on your first X5, gangs and one-man-shows are equally involved. The gangs though are the ones that are likely to target the rare stuff, rather than the local stuff.DonFlintoni wrote:I hear and share your frustrations Del but its hardly likely to be your averge burberry wearing chav thats doing this. More like eastern europe organised crime gangs.
10 to the penny cars like X5s will have cloned plates fitted so they can be used every day without suspicion being raised until theyre either stripped or shipped abroad. Alpinas on the other hand would have to be taken to a location out of sight and your average chav won't have that faciity or the contacts to sell on.
Former Alpina owner. Having a break.
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- ALPINA
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- Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2010 8:16 pm
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This was my thinking as well.joylove wrote:With the gear costing just a few hundred Euros on eBay, which you'd make back on your first X5, gangs and one-man-shows are equally involved. The gangs though are the ones that are likely to target the rare stuff, rather than the local stuff.DonFlintoni wrote:I hear and share your frustrations Del but its hardly likely to be your averge burberry wearing chav thats doing this. More like eastern europe organised crime gangs.
Surely it must be possible to prosecute the firms selling them as it's got to be illegal even if they are being sold off shore.
On a mission to burn as much fossil fuel as possible before it runs out.
Not sure. Like other theft tools such as hammers, ladders or flatbed trucks they aren't banned so can't be illegal to sell them. What they could get them for is copyright infringement on BMW code.dellboy 1959 wrote:This was my thinking as well.joylove wrote:With the gear costing just a few hundred Euros on eBay, which you'd make back on your first X5, gangs and one-man-shows are equally involved. The gangs though are the ones that are likely to target the rare stuff, rather than the local stuff.DonFlintoni wrote:I hear and share your frustrations Del but its hardly likely to be your averge burberry wearing chav thats doing this. More like eastern europe organised crime gangs.
Surely it must be possible to prosecute the firms selling them as it's got to be illegal even if they are being sold off shore.
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- ALPINA
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- Location: Scunthorpe
But surely you could argue that normal tools such as hammers/screwdrivers have more than one purpose whereas this gadget is produced for one purpose and one purpose only.
I would at least like to see some sort of restriction in sales as in you must prove your a genuine respected garage before you are allowed one.
Let's face it, you couldn't go into a gunsmiths and say sell me that 12 bore and I'll show you my FAC license next time i pop in
I would at least like to see some sort of restriction in sales as in you must prove your a genuine respected garage before you are allowed one.
Let's face it, you couldn't go into a gunsmiths and say sell me that 12 bore and I'll show you my FAC license next time i pop in
On a mission to burn as much fossil fuel as possible before it runs out.