Ham
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I imagine there will be a booming trade in Indy garages offering mods to bypass all the hardware and just add a switch to turn the elements on and off.
If it's software then it will be hacked
It's likely going to be a little more complicated. That is, cars are now part of the Internet of Sh-it, I mean, Things and in normal circumstances security with a 256 key pair is almost certain to provide security against unauthorised changes. So, any hack is likely to have to effectively "root" the car systems. Anyone who does that may end up with substantially more (or less) than they bargained for. That is either unpredictable and undesirable effects on other aspects of the car control (and don't forget everything including braking and steering could be impacted) or malicious code inserted. Turning your car into a housebrick (or even, broken housebrick) is not something you'd want.
The reverse engineering of the car system would be a massive task, so probably beyond the reach of any single hacker. Whether there is common interest will depend on the commercial benefit, so it would probably fall to organised crime, rather than any open source project (which would attract the attention of the companies involved)
So, yes, it isn't impossible that it would be hacked, but anyone with any instinct for self preservation would be unlikely to use it.
(just to be clear, it is this connectivity and improved security that makes the exercise fundamentally different from anything that has gone before)
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