Danish authorities in rush to close security loophole in Chinese electric buses
Investigation launched after discovery that Chinese supplier had remote access to vehicles’ control systems Authorities in Denmark are urgently studying how to close an apparent security loophole in hundreds of Chinese-made electric buses that enables them to be remotely deactivated. The (…)
Site référencé:
The Guardian (Middle East)
3241.jpg?width=140&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=eb5e729c90fb32cf4b47b727a6b12c73, 3241.jpg?width=460&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=1fb09a5be294b8f1a12cc7e9bce149b6, 3241.jpg?width=700&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=09b7594eb8e1526f4a3ada5a88e683a3
The Guardian (Middle East)
The Guardian view on Europe’s housing crisis : time for the EU to get radical | Editorial
4/11/2025
Ben Jennings on Rachel Reeves’s plans for the autumn budget – cartoon
4/11/2025
De Niro to JLaw : should celebrities be expected to speak out against Trump ?
4/11/2025
Michelle Obama’s book details how the media’s fixation on her arms was used to ‘otherize’ her
4/11/2025
Donna Jean Godchaux supplied steel and soul to the Grateful Dead in their prime
4/11/2025
A definitive list of what’s cool (and what’s not cool) | Letters
4/11/2025