100 Million Volkswagen Group Vehicles Can Be Unlocked With a Cheap Hacking Device

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Two decades’ worth of Volkswagen Group vehicles are vulnerable to a simple, cheap hack that can unlock their doors.

A research paper released this week (first reported by Wired) describes how multiple Volkswagen, Audi, Seat and Skoda models built since 1995 can be unlocked using a handmade radio that copies key fob signals.

In the paper, researchers from the University of Birmingham and German security firm Kasper & Oswald outline two ways of getting into an unwilling vehicle. Both methods employ cheap radio hardware to “clone” a driver’s key fob. After hacking the encryption used by Volkswagen on millions of keys, all they needed to do was use a radio to intercept the unique signal from an individual key.

Mix the two values, and bingo. An unlocked car.

“You only need to eavesdrop once,” says Birmingham researcher David Oswald. “From that point on you can make a clone of the original remote control that locks and unlocks a vehicle as many times as you want.”

The first method involves a software defined radio connected to a laptop, but there’s a problem with that route. The hacker must be within 300 feet of the vehicle to catch the signal. A better way is to build your own Arduino board with an attached radio receiver. The radio itself might set a hacker back $40, and the overall package is much smaller.

The hardest part of the operation is hacking the shared key values. Only four exist, spread out among the roughly 100 million Volkswagen Group vehicles with keyless entry systems, but once hacked, the information can then be shared.

The researchers don’t disclose the shared key values in their paper, and alerted Volkswagen to their findings.

“We were kind of shocked,” Timo Kasper at Kasper & Oswald told the BBC. “Millions of keys using the same secrets — from a cryptography point of view, that’s a catastrophe.”

The team claims to know of at least 10 other widespread hacking schemes affecting other automakers, but haven’t yet published their findings.

[Image: Volkswagen of America]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Robbie Robbie on Aug 12, 2016

    Does this mean cheap replacement keys from some guy on Ebay?

  • MBella MBella on Aug 13, 2016

    100% of cars can be unlocked with a coat hanger. Where's the sensationalist headline?

    • See 1 previous
    • DenverMike DenverMike on Aug 14, 2016

      I'd rather own a car anyone (me especially) can somewhat easily break into. But coat hangers work on probably 0.01% of autos made since '87. That's not to say you couldn't pop the lock on probably 25% of newer cars with home manufactured tools or a slim-jim if you know exactly what you're doing. Although, unlocking a stranger's or victim's car "remotely" should be a difficult/expensive task. This adds a new twist or angle for thieves casually walking up to a car they remotely unlocked , drawing almost zero unwanted attention to themselves. This still doesn't start the cars, but thieves are likely more interested in grabbing anything of value in your car, than stealing the car itself.

  • 28-Cars-Later I'm getting a Knight Rider vibe... or is it more Knightboat?
  • 28-Cars-Later "the person would likely be involved in taking the Corvette to the next level with full electrification."Chevrolet sold 37,224 C8s in 2023 starting at $65,895 in North America (no word on other regions) while Porsche sold 40,629 Taycans worldwide starting at $99,400. I imagine per unit Porsche/VAG profit at $100K+ but was far as R&D payback and other sunk costs I cannot say. I remember reading the new C8 platform was designed for hybrids (or something to that effect) so I expect Chevrolet to experiment with different model types but I don't expect Corvette to become the Taycan. If that is the expectation, I think it will ride off into the sunset because GM is that incompetent/impotent. Additional: In ten years outside of wrecks I expect a majority of C8s to still be running and economically roadworthy, I do not expect that of Taycans.
  • Tassos Jong-iL Not all martyrs see divinity, but at least you tried.
  • ChristianWimmer My girlfriend has a BMW i3S. She has no garage. Her car parks on the street in front of her apartment throughout the year. The closest charging station in her neighborhood is about 1 kilometer away. She has no EV-charging at work.When her charge is low and she’s on the way home, she will visit that closest 1 km away charger (which can charge two cars) , park her car there (if it’s not occupied) and then she has two hours time to charge her car before she is by law required to move. After hooking up her car to the charger, she has to walk that 1 km home and go back in 2 hours. It’s not practical for sure and she does find it annoying.Her daily trip to work is about 8 km. The 225 km range of her BMW i3S will last her for a week or two and that’s fine for her. I would never be able to handle this “stress”. I prefer pulling up to a gas station, spend barely 2 minutes filling up my small 53 liter fuel tank, pay for the gas and then manage almost 720 km range in my 25-35% thermal efficient internal combustion engine vehicle.
  • Tassos Jong-iL Here in North Korea we are lucky to have any tires.
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