Nissan Motor said on Friday it has suspended a
mobile phone application for a pair of electric vehicles, including the world’s
top seller, after finding it can be easily hacked.
Concerns over hacking consumer products have
skyrocketed in recent
years, due to the profusion of smart technology that
means many functions and appliances can be controlled remotely via the
Internet.
Nissan was forced to take its global website offline
last month after it was brought down by an activist claiming to belong to the Anonymous
collective in protest at Japanese whaling.
Japan’s number two carmaker said the app, which
controls the vehicles’ air-conditioning systems, was currently unavailable but stressed
no other “critical driving elements” were affected in the Leaf and eNV200 models.
The Leaf, the world’s best selling electric car, has
clocked up sales of more than 200,000 vehicles since its launch in 2010.
Nissan suspended the app following an internal
probe and said it aims to update and relaunch the application “very soon”.
The automaker found the dedicated server for the
app had a problem that meant the temperature control and other functions were
accessible “via a non-secure route,” it said.
“The only functions that are affected are those
controlled via the mobile phone? - all of which can still be used manually,”
Nissan said.
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