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UTSA Researchers Help Protect EV Charging Stations from Cyberattacks


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An electric vehicle plugged into a charging station.

The researchers discovered a range of vulnerabilities in the 16 electric vehicle charging systems they analyzed, and highlighted what they consideredc the 13 most severe vulnerabilities, such as missing authentication and cross-site scripting.

Credit: SciTechDaily

Researchers at the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA), the UAE's University of Dubai, and Canada's Concordia University have found that electrical vehicle (EV) charging stations and their Internet-based management systems are vulnerable to cybersecurity attacks.

The researchers performed a comprehensive security analysis of each of the 16 electrical vehicle charging managing systems they identified.

UTSA's Elias Bou-Harb said, "We devised a system lookup and collection approach to identify a large number of electrical vehicle charging systems, then leveraged reverse engineering and white/black-box Web application penetration testing techniques to perform a thorough vulnerability analysis."

The study highlights the 13 most severe vulnerabilities found in these charging systems, including missing authentication and cross-site scripting.

Among other things, the researchers recommend developers patch existing vulnerabilities and implement initial security measures during the manufacturing of these systems.

From University of Texas at San Antonio
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Abstracts Copyright © 2022 SmithBucklin, Washington, DC, USA


 

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