• @ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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    1710 months ago

    Where’s the evidence that this stuff is even happening at a high enough rate to even be noteworthy? It seems these articles come out every couple of years, always heavy on claims and light on facts, trying to drum up FUD based on almost nothing but chatter. Last time it was a single grainy night-time video of a couple cars in a driveway where you see the lights flash and theives open the car.

    The article claims insurance rates are skyrocketing due to car theft, yet their own article from January they cite states that insurance rates have skyrocketed due to record high inflation.

    The article claims police close these cases out in 24 hours which means they aren’t even investigating the crimes to find out what happened. They also quote the police who stated that ‘car crimes’ are down 39% since 2010. Police aren’t stating this is an issue.

    They quote a couple manufacturers who have higher rates of stolen vehicles and all they state is that they take security seriously and are working on improvements. There’s no admission or statement here that this is even occurring.

    Finally the only remaining evidence is a paper written 12 years ago theorizing that this could be an issue. Hardly proof that it’s currently occurring.

    To me, it just sounds like people who’ve watched too many movies like Gone in 60 Seconds and don’t understand technology very well who’re screaming that the sky is falling.

    • @toynbee@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      While my car wasn’t stolen, something very similar to this did happen to me. At the time, my wife and I kept our keys by the door. Our tenant did not, opting to keep the keys in her room. Sadly, my cameras didn’t catch the person, but you can see their silhouette approach the driveway, then the lights on my wife’s and my cars flash (exactly as you describe) before the person entered them and searched them. (This was during lockdown, so we weren’t travelling anywhere and so fortunately didn’t have anything of value in our car.) Our other friend’s car did not open.

      I’m not suggesting this is an epidemic or anything, merely that it’s possible.

      ETA: We only had one copy of our keys each and at no point did they go missing. The police did come to investigate (apparently it happened to at least several people on our street) but we never heard back. Presumably the person was not found.

      • icedterminal
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        810 months ago

        It’s called a relay attack. Thieves just amplify the normally very weak signal and intercept communication. This allows them to unlock the door, and if push start, bypass the immobilizer to start the car. If a key is still required, this doesn’t work for starting the car.

        The general rule for key fobs is never keep them near the door where the car is parked. Place them on the opposite side of the house. If you want to, some suggestions around the web include making a homemade Faraday box to put your key fob in.

        • @toynbee@lemmy.world
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          310 months ago

          Indeed - nowadays my keys are far from anywhere accessible from the outside. Thanks though!

      • @sleepmode@lemmy.world
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        210 months ago

        interesting. Usually they will try to start your car and take off using that signal boosting method.

        • @toynbee@lemmy.world
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          410 months ago

          I think this individual was going for lower hanging fruit (and presumably hoping for lighter consequences if they got caught, though I’m not sure that’s what they would have gotten).

          In this case, after talking to neighbors, it seemed like they were just going down the street, briefly stopping at each driveway, breaking into whatever cars they could, quickly going through the glove compartment and center console, and stealing anything they perceived to be of value.