Good Info to Protect Your Car

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Good Info to Protect Your Car

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MOST NEW vehicles on the market come with keyless entry systems that use a “smart key” that allows them to lock and unlock their doors, trunk or tailgate and start the car from afar.
But while these smart keys have made starting, locking and unlocking your car easier than ever, thieves have figured out a way to commandeer the technology to steal cars. They do this using a system called a “relay attack.”
These thefts are increasing so it’s imperative that you take steps to protect your fob.
The fob weakness
Modern key fobs are electronically linked to our vehicles, and they communicate using a low-energy wireless signal. When the driver is near their vehicle and the car validates the fob signal, the fob can unlock the car and once inside start it simply by the driver pressing a dashboard button.
And when the car is parked and locked it is always scanning to detect a signal from the fob that is linked to it. Upon detection, it grants access to the locks and ignition.
Thieves use specialized electronic equipment that can locate and amplify the signals of your fob to another device that impersonates your key. It takes a thief and an accomplice to pull these thefts off.
One has to be near you and/or your key fob and, using their equipment, they can detect the fob signal, amplify it and transmit it over a significant distance to a device that the thief has near your car. This device can then mimic your fob and the car will allow the thief to open the doors and start the ignition.
In other words, these devices bridge the gap in proximity to fool your vehicle into thinking its fob is just a foot or two away – even if it’s not.
Thieves can carry out a relay attack in your driveway by sniffing out a signal from the key fob in your home. Or they can stake out a parking lot and target a vehicle; one of the criminals follows you into the store and hijacks your fob signal and transmits it to their accomplice, who is in the parking lot next to your car.
• When at home park your car in the garage or install security cameras if you park in the driveway.
• When at home, don’t leave your car keys near your front door. Keep them further inside the home to make it harder for anyone outside to tap the signal.
• When outside, park in a well-lit area near security cameras or in a high-traffic area.
• Buy an RFID signal-blocking pouch, which looks like a small leather sachets but blocks the your fob’s signals, making it difficult or impossible for signal- amplifying equipment to read.
• Store your fob in a metal container, like a can or toolbox, which can help block the signal.

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