Norway’s public transport system thought it was buying clean, quiet Chinese electric buses. Instead, it stumbled into a live test of how vulnerable modern vehicles are when their most critical systems ...
European transport authorities are concerned after a Norwegian operator discovered a security vulnerability in Chinese-made Yutong electric buses, which could allow for the remote shutdown of the ...
An electric bus operated by Movia in Copenhagen, Denmark. Nearly 70 percent of the city’s buses are made by Chinese companies. Yet these security and dependency concerns have so far done little to ...
Chinese-made electric buses are quickly becoming the standard for public transport in Southeast Asia, driven by ...
Imagine waiting at a bus stop, checking your watch, and thinking: is the vehicle late, or did someone in another country hit the “off” switch? Welcome to the new era of public transport paranoia, ...
Several European countries are investigating whether Chinese-made electric buses could be remotely deactivated, amid growing national security concerns over China-built infrastructure across the ...
OSLO, Norway (AP) — A leading Norwegian public transport operator has said it will introduce stricter security requirements and step up anti-hacking measures after a test on new Chinese-made electric ...
Fears over dependency on Chinese technology have reached an unlikely corner of the West: the previously serene and efficient world of Scandinavian public transportation. European nations have become ...
In a nutshell: Frosty relations between the US and China might have thawed slightly over the last few days, but Europe is investigating a new concern related to the Asian nation: whether electric ...