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Fiat Chrysler recalls 1.4 million cars Fiat Chrysler recalls 1.4 million cars after Jeep hack
(35 minutes later)
Fiat Chrysler has issued a safety recall affecting 1.4m in the US, after security researchers showed that one of its cars could be hacked. Fiat Chrysler has issued a safety recall affecting 1.4m vehicles in the US, after security researchers showed that one of its cars could be hacked.
On Tuesday, technology magazine Wired showed that hackers could take control of a Jeep Cherokee via its internet-connected entertainment system.On Tuesday, technology magazine Wired showed that hackers could take control of a Jeep Cherokee via its internet-connected entertainment system.
Chrysler said it was issuing a voluntary recall to update the software in affected vehicles.Chrysler said it was issuing a voluntary recall to update the software in affected vehicles.
The company added that hacking its vehicles was a "criminal action".The company added that hacking its vehicles was a "criminal action".
"The recall aligns with an ongoing software distribution that insulates connected vehicles from remote manipulation, which, if unauthorised, constitutes criminal action," the company said. The security flaw exposed in Wired showed that it was possible for hackers to control one of the company's vehicles remotely, using the entertainment system which connected to the mobile data network.
More to follow. Fiat Chrysler said exploiting the flaw "required unique and extensive technical knowledge, prolonged physical access to a subject vehicle and extended periods of time to write code" and added manipulating its software "constitutes criminal action".
The two security researchers who carried out the hack, Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek of IOActive, have spent years investigating car control systems and developing ways to subvert them. The pair are due to reveal more information about their work at the Def Con hacker conference next month.
Affected vehicles
The company said it was "unaware of any injuries related to software exploitation".
It said the recall was issued to help customers with the "ongoing software distribution that insulates connected vehicles from remote manipulation".
The issue affected up to 1.4m vehicles sold in the United States, which had been fitted with the company's uConnect system.
A spokesman for Fiat-Chrysler told the BBC that no vehicles sold in the UK were affected.
The recall comes soon after two US senators introduced a bill to call on the US Federal Trade Commission and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to set standards on vehicle security for car makers.
The bill would also create a security rating system for cars so consumers would know which ones worked hardest to make unhackable cars.