Skip to main content

ISIS progressing with work on driverless car bombs, security analyst says

Audi's A7 autonomous car
Advocate of self-driving cars say they could revolutionize transportation, freeing up commuters’ time and offering mobility to people who don’t currently have it. But they may not always be used for such positive purposes. Autonomous cars could also become a weapon in terrorists’ arsenals, a security analyst says.

There is “concrete evidence” that ISIS is developing self-driving cars to use in place of suicide bombers, Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer of F-Secure, said in a speech at South by Southwest covered by Autoblog. He said the group even plans to put mannequins in cars and replicate a human body’s heat signature, to fool security systems into thinking a person is actually driving. Indeed, video of such a car surfaced back in January.

Recommended Videos

That car appeared to be remote controlled, but the fear is that terrorists could load a bomb into a self-driving car, set a destination, and send it on its way. That would reduce the need for volunteer suicide bombers, but still allow groups to carry out deadly attacks. The upside, if you could call it that, is that ISIS appears to be the only group capable of developing these weapons, according to Hypponen. However, this may not be the only destructive use of future self-driving cars.

Public demonstrations by security researchers, like the remote hacking of a Jeep last year, have led to concerns over security vulnerabilities in today’s software-intensive cars. That’s likely to become more of a concern as cars begin driving themselves. In 2014, the FBI’s Strategic Issues Group published a report that said autonomous cars “will have a high impact on transforming what both law enforcement and its adversaries can operationally do with a car.”

The report noted that self-driving cars could provide some benefits to cops, including increasing the “tactical performance of physical tasks that a person may be inhibited by while driving a car manually today,” and providing a greater margin of safety, but it also warned that autonomous tech could make a car “more of a potential lethal weapon than it is today.”

Whether its hackers or terrorists jury rigging autonomous car bombs, it just goes to show that every technology has a dark side. And while an outcome isn’t inevitable just because it was predicted in a report, it’s worth considering that as we race toward a future of self-driving cars.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Cruise’s robot taxis head to Arizona and Texas
A passenger getting into a Cruise robotaxi.

Cruise’s autonomous cars are heading to Texas and Arizona before the end of this year.

The General Motors-owned company plans to launch ridesharing pilots in Austin and Phoenix in what will be its first expansion of the service outside of San Francisco.

Read more
Ex-Apple employee pleads guilty to nabbing Apple Car secrets
The Apple logo is displayed at the Apple Store June 17, 2015 on Fifth Avenue in New York City

A former Apple employee on Monday pled guilty to the theft of trade secrets from the tech firm.

The material stolen by Xiaolang Zhang was linked to Apple’s work on its first-ever automobile, a project that’s been in and out of the headlines for years though never officially confirmed by the company.

Read more
Check out Baidu’s futuristic robotaxi
Baidu's next-generation autonomous robotaxi.

Chinese tech giant Baidu says its next-generation autonomous taxi features the capabilities of a "skilled driver with 20 years of experience.”

The Beijing-based company, which operates a ridesharing service similar to Uber’s, unveiled the all-electric Apollo RT6 at a special event on Wednesday, July 20.

Read more