Connected cars right now are on the difficult part of the “S Curve” of adoption. Pretty much everyone thinks they are already here and already reliable, but they aren’t and it appears they might not be for some time.
But the real problem for connected cars is much bigger than this. It’s the fact that, increasingly, cars are computers. And computers can be hacked.
“The software operating a modern car may have a hundred million lines of code in its software – more than a modern fighter jet, airliner, or operating system such as Windows or Mac OS,” says security expert Eugene Kaspersky. “With so much code, the likelihood that it has bugs and vulnerabilities is very high – even if the software engineers made security a priority when developing it, which is not always the case.”
What happens to the expectation of reliability when cars stop behaving less like pieces of industrial machinery and more like the computers they are increasingly are?
But what happens to the expectation of reliability when cars stop behaving less like pieces of industrial machinery and more like the computers they are increasingly are? The “blue screen of death” might take a chilling turn for the real if it happens in the middle of the desert in Arizona, or in -30 degree weather in Saskatchewan.
BlackBerry today announced that it is demonstrating an over-the-air update solution at the TU-Automotive show in Detroit. The company says this feature will reduce the amount of hardware required on board a car and will update it with new features for its entire lifespan.
The real interesting part of the equation, however, is whether Blackberry can do this securely. CEO John Chen knows security is its prime draw in the world of mobile devices, but delivering fail safe updates to cars could be a game changer that could extend to the entirety of the Internet of Things space.
As for Microsoft, in December of last year, Ford said it would be replacing the glitchy Microsoft Auto with BlackBerry’s QNX. The American auto giant joins Porsche, BMW, Saab, Audi and Acura as QNX converts.
This three horse race clearly has room for a fourth, and under aggressive new leader John Chen, BlackBerry is smelling an opportunity.
In May of last year, Chen hinted at “a major play in the M2M space” that turned out to be BlackBerry Technology Solutions, which incorporates the company’s QNX division, security software company Certicom, Paratek antenna tuning technology and an approximately 44,000-strong patent portfolio, along with the blue-sky Internet of Things lab called Project Ion.
In Detroit today, that division was talking auto security.
“Offering over-the-air updates to automakers is a core capability of our IoT platform, and BlackBerry is doing it with the gold-standard security that the auto industry demands,” said Senior Director of Business Development for IoT, BlackBerry Technology Solutions Steve West, . “Our infrastructure provides automakers with a hosted, global solution, built from years of technology and deployment know-how, that can lower costs and help them get to market faster. BlackBerry offers a unique combination of security, reliability, and scalability, and we have proven results, delivering tens of millions of updates per year in over 100 countries.”
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Cantech Letter founder and editor Nick Waddell has lived in five Canadian provinces and is proud of his country's often overlooked contributions to the world of science and technology. Waddell takes a regular shift on the Canadian media circuit, making appearances on CTV, CBC and BNN, and contributing to publications such as Canadian Business and Business Insider.
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How can this be a three way race without BlackBerry who has 50% of the infotainment market?
Epic connected cars: https://youtu.be/6XOoAs-K8aU