Wired is reporting that an outfit called Automatic wants to help us hack our cars in all kinds of ways.
They claim that by plugging a small device into the OBD2 port and coordinating with a company called IFTTT, one can hack one's car to, say, turn on the porch lights when you turn in the drive. Or maybe open the garage door without ever touching a button in the car, all because you passed through a geofence telling your house you're home. Do you want to send a text to your wife when you leave work/the bar/your girlfriend's house? It can do that. Do you want to send a text to your boss when you're stuck in traffic? Can do that, too. It can let you know your gas mileage. It can post your location and average speed to FB. This is intriguing.
[Wait, . . . what's this on the bottom? "NSA ID number 47-3B-17985", "Made in China". Maybe both the Reds and the Feds will know, too?]
They claim that by plugging a small device into the OBD2 port and coordinating with a company called IFTTT, one can hack one's car to, say, turn on the porch lights when you turn in the drive. Or maybe open the garage door without ever touching a button in the car, all because you passed through a geofence telling your house you're home. Do you want to send a text to your wife when you leave work/the bar/your girlfriend's house? It can do that. Do you want to send a text to your boss when you're stuck in traffic? Can do that, too. It can let you know your gas mileage. It can post your location and average speed to FB. This is intriguing.
[Wait, . . . what's this on the bottom? "NSA ID number 47-3B-17985", "Made in China". Maybe both the Reds and the Feds will know, too?]