http://motherboard.vice.com/read/hack-makes-car-tweet-its-mileage-and-more
Hack Makes Car Tweet Its Mileage and More
November 28, 2015  Joseph Cox

[tweet
https://twitter.com/edent_car/status/669943951143649280
edent's Car ‏@edent_car
6 miles in 19 minutes
Efficiency: 3.91 miles/kWh
45% (31 miles)
Unplugged
Shutdown Secured
2,165 miles total
10:20 AM - 26 Nov 2015
]

When someone mentions 'car hacking', your mind is likely [filled] with
images of Google's self-driving cars going on a malware-induced riot, or
researchers remotely cutting the ignition to a jeep while casually sitting
on their sofas.

But car hacking isn't all about identifying vulnerabilities so they can be
fixed: Other researchers are making usability improvements too. Terence
Eden, a senior product manager from O2 UK, has managed to get his BMW i3
electric car to tweet stats about itself, such as the distance it has
traveled, its fuel efficiency, and more.

The process comes in several different stages. First, Eden installed Packet
Capture, a piece of software used to intercept communications between
devices. Eden used this to snoop on the messages being sent from his Android
phone running the official i Remote App to his BMW. The i Remote App is a
companion piece of software for the company's cars, and allows a user to
control different features of their vehicle, such as unlocking the doors or
honking the horn.

Although some of the app's features are interesting, it is “slow, ugly, and
a pain to use,” Eden writes on his blog. So, by capturing the commands sent
by the app, Eden reverse engineered his own interface for interacting with
the BMW.

Armed with this, Eden was able to pick out all sorts of details about his
car, including the battery level of the vehicle, the traveled distance, and
information about its destination.

From here, it's possible to start sending commands to the car in whatever
way you see fit.

“Your app communicates with the API, the API then communicates with the
car's 3G modem, then you have to wait for a response,” Eden writes.

In Eden's case, he has set up a Twitter account posting updates on behalf of
his BMW. Most of these include basic information about the car's usage.

“It would be lovely if BMW decided to open up an official API so that people
could fiddle with their cars,” Eden adds. “The API seems secure and there's
limited scope for damaging the vehicles.”
[© 2015 Vice Media]
...
https://twitter.com/edent_car?ref_src=twsrc^tfw
edent's Car @edent_car
I am a BMW i3 - an electric car. Driven & hacked on by @edent. Charged by
@edent_solar. Arch enemy of @edent_roomba! Occasional carrier of
@summerbeth.
UK 
...
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bmwi.remote&hl=en
(Android app)
...
https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2015/11/reverse-engineering-the-bmw-i3-api/
Terence Eden's Blog
Reverse Engineering the BMW i3 API
November 27, 2015 
I'm really enjoying driving the BMW i3.
I'd love to have it tweet its driving efficiency, or upload its location to
my server, or let me turn on its air-conditioning when the temperature gets
too warm - there are a hundred interesting things to do with the car's data.
The official app has some of these features - but is slow, ugly, and a pain
to use ... (+more details)



[dated]
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Hack-your-U-S-i3-rex-pih-to-unleash-its-denied-Euro-goodies-tp4677457.html
EVLN: Hack your U.S. i3-rex pih to unleash its denied Euro-goodies
Sep 05 2015




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