2 seconds, $600 and 1 weak encryption code allowed researchers in Belgium to copy Tesla Model S key. Hackers managed to copy a Tesla Model S key in two seconds with just $600 of equipment, researchers have said. Using a cheap Raspberry Pi minicomputer, a team of researchers at KU Leuven, a university in Belgium, said they repeated the attack on several different Model S vehicles to confirm the hack was legit. It notified Tesla and the key fob supplier of the weakness in August 2017 and earned a $10,000 bounty from Tesla for finding it.
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