I went war-driving on a whim today. You wouldn’t believe how much personal information your car leaks out. I saw names like “Drew’s Chevy” and Oscar’s Audi S5".
I locked my car down as much as possible when I got it.
I went war-driving on a whim today. You wouldn’t believe how much personal information your car leaks out. I saw names like “Drew’s Chevy” and Oscar’s Audi S5".
I locked my car down as much as possible when I got it.
Where or how did you see that? As bluetooth clients?
Bluetooth radios have unique mac addresses, so adding a relatively common first name to it doesn’t mean much, if someone wants to track you via this, it doesnt really matter if it’s
04:ad:22...
orGeodad's car
I don’t know why the car has the persons name, but it’s the same thing with most peoples smartphones. People usually never turn off bluetooth when not in use and it’s always blasting their name. Though it is of course easier to see who Oscar is when there’s a whole car model to match it to.
For car’s, I wonder why they can’t only blast a device name while in pairing mode. Dunno of it’s just not a possibility, but that seems smort.
All these cars had cell modems and shared it as WiFi hotspots.
There’s also Bluetooth radios all over, and those tire pressure monitoring systems, which I understand are legally-mandated on new cars, broadcast a unique identifier.
https://askmyauto.com/are-tire-pressure-sensors-required-by-law/
https://medium.com/@doctoreww/day-2-your-car-is-trackable-by-law-1d5f74388850