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CamperBob2 4 hours ago

If it's not connected to the internet, there is no issue.

It's connected to the Internet. Every car has a SIM card now.

gruez 4 hours ago | parent [-]

>It's connected to the Internet. Every car has a SIM card now.

Maybe every new car, but the average car is 13 years old, and the OP made no clarification on whether his advice was for only new cars, or for a 2015 econobox as well.

jeroenhd 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

My car is older than that and came with an embedded SIM card. Quite a few navigation consoles had "live traffic updates" (often in trial format, but sometimes "lifetime") that basically consisted of 2G clients occasionally updating traffic data along planned routes. Not quite bottom of the line at the time, but also not uncommon at that point either. It's probably slightly worse than the dedicated satnav screens people were buying back when the car was new, although neither compares to what a smartphone will expose passively from just being inside of a moving car.

1313ed01 an hour ago | parent [-]

Probably the only good thing about this country shutting down the 2G and 3G networks now is all the spy devices that will go permanently offline.

jeroenhd an hour ago | parent [-]

On the one hand, they won't be able to communicate with the home base anymore. On the other hand, they'll light up the map like a Christmas tree if someone ever turns on a stingray in their vicinity.

everdrive 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Most people don't know, and will never know whether their car is connected to the internet, so it's better to assume it is unless you have specific information. The app or phone you connect to the car could also be a major exfil point of this data.