The news: Cariad, a Volkswagen subsidiary, leaked the personal data of 800,000 VW, Audi, Seat, and Skoda EV drivers. The leak included precise location data for 460,000 cars and personal information.
It’s the latest setback to EV and connected car adoption, revealing how technology-dependent vehicles collect far too much personal data—which some security experts see as a privacy nightmare.
A bad start to VW’s EV pivot: This incident compounds VW’s challenges that already include sluggish EV sales and its recovery from the 2015 Dieselgate scandal.
A much-larger problem: The automaker stated that the data was not easily exploitable and emphasized that no malicious exploitation was reported. But the lack of encryption and ease of data access raises broader concerns about vehicle data privacy.
The incident could further diminish EV buyers’ confidence in automakers’ ability to keep their data secure. Only 18% of US consumers trust car manufacturers as managers for connected vehicle data, per Deloitte.
Key takeaway: Security and IT lapses can slow connected car adoption, particularly in regions where privacy concerns already loom large.
If automakers don’t address these vulnerabilities, they risk undermining the progress made in promoting EVs as the future of sustainable mobility.
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