Car HackingBusinessLibrary of Congress Says It's OK to Hack Your CarBy Klint FinleySecurityHackers Make Cars Safer. Don't Ban Them From TinkeringBy Terrell McSweenySecurity5 Lessons From the Summer of Epic Car HacksBy Andy GreenbergSecurityCar Hack Technique Uses Dealerships to Spread MalwareBy Andy GreenbergSecurityGM Took 5 Years to Fix a Full-Takeover Hack in Millions of OnStar CarsBy Andy GreenbergSecurityChrysler Catches Flak for Patching Hack Via Mailed USBBy Andy GreenbergSecurityUber Hires the Hackers Who Wirelessly Hijacked a JeepBy Andy GreenbergSecuritySecurity News This Week: US Admits It Uses Predictions, Not Data, to Blacklist FlyersBy Yael Grauer SecurityYour BMW or Benz Could Also Be Vulnerable to That GM OnStar HackBy Andy GreenbergSecurityHackers Cut a Corvette's Brakes Via a Common Car GadgetBy Andy GreenbergSecurityPatch Your Chrysler Now Against a Wireless Hacking AttackBy Andy GreenbergSecuritySenate Bill Seeks Standards For Cars' Defenses From HackersBy Andy GreenbergTransportationYou Can Buy This Bonkers Jet Car for Just $30KBy Alex DaviesSecurityA $60 Gadget That Makes Car Hacking Far EasierBy Andy Greenberg