Close Menu
Tech Savvyed
  • Home
  • News
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Gadgets
  • Apps
  • Mobile
  • Gaming
  • Accessories
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
MOFT’s ultra-slim MagSafe wallet with a kickstand gets Apple Find My tracking

MOFT’s ultra-slim MagSafe wallet with a kickstand gets Apple Find My tracking

23 February 2026
WWE 2K26 Preview – Maintaining A Status Quo

WWE 2K26 Preview – Maintaining A Status Quo

23 February 2026
Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback

Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback

23 February 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Tech Savvyed
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • News
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Gadgets
  • Apps
  • Mobile
  • Gaming
  • Accessories
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
Tech Savvyed
Home»News»The next big car threat is an AI backdoor you can’t detect
News

The next big car threat is an AI backdoor you can’t detect

News RoomBy News Room23 February 20262 Mins Read
The next big car threat is an AI backdoor you can’t detect
Share
Facebook Twitter Reddit Telegram Pinterest Email

Forget the fender bender. The real danger to self-driving cars might be a hack that sleeps inside the vehicle’s AI, waiting for the right moment to strike. Georgia Tech researchers uncovered a new vulnerability called VillainNet, and it exposes a critical blind spot in autonomous systems.

The backdoor stays inactive until specific conditions wake it up. Then it works 99% of the time. A criminal could program the trigger for almost anything, say a self-driving taxi responding to rain. Current security tools can’t spot this threat. Your car could be compromised and you’d never know until it’s too late.

How VillainNet hides in plain sight

The flaw lives in the architecture of modern AI. Self-driving cars rely on what researchers call super networks, massive systems that swap smaller modules in and out depending on the task. Think of it as a digital toolbox with billions of specialized tools.

Lead researcher David Oygenblik, a Ph.D. student at Georgia Tech, said an attacker only needs to poison one tiny tool in that box. The malicious code stays invisible across countless normal configurations until the car calls up that specific module. Then it activates. The search space is staggering. Oygenblik compared it to finding a single needle in a haystack with 10 quintillion straws.

The hostage scenario is real

This isn’t a theoretical exercise. The team outlines a frightening possibility. A hacker could program an autonomous taxi to wait for rain, then grab control when the car adjusts to wet roads.

Once inside, they could hold passengers hostage and demand payment, threatening to crash. The method works. In lab tests, VillainNet succeeded 99% of the time when triggered while leaving no trace otherwise.

Why this fix is nearly impossible

The research landed at a major security conference in October 2025. The message for automakers is blunt. Detecting a VillainNet backdoor would take 66 times more computing power than current methods allow.

That search isn’t practical today. The team calls its work a wake-up call, pushing for new defenses before these attacks move from labs to public roads.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Reddit Email
Previous ArticleThe Galaxy S26 Ultra may come in two online-exclusive colorways, and they look very familiar
Next Article Nothing shows off the Phone 4a’s refreshed back panel and new Glyph Bar ahead of launch

Related Articles

MOFT’s ultra-slim MagSafe wallet with a kickstand gets Apple Find My tracking

MOFT’s ultra-slim MagSafe wallet with a kickstand gets Apple Find My tracking

23 February 2026
Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback

Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback

23 February 2026
Nothing shows off the Phone 4a’s refreshed back panel and new Glyph Bar ahead of launch

Nothing shows off the Phone 4a’s refreshed back panel and new Glyph Bar ahead of launch

23 February 2026
The Galaxy S26 Ultra may come in two online-exclusive colorways, and they look very familiar

The Galaxy S26 Ultra may come in two online-exclusive colorways, and they look very familiar

23 February 2026
The “dumb” TV pivot: why your next screen shouldn’t be smart

The “dumb” TV pivot: why your next screen shouldn’t be smart

23 February 2026
Your ChatGPT chats are more personal than you think

Your ChatGPT chats are more personal than you think

23 February 2026
Demo
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
WWE 2K26 Preview – Maintaining A Status Quo

WWE 2K26 Preview – Maintaining A Status Quo

By News Room23 February 2026

Annual franchises have the difficult task of staying fresh and exciting within a development cycle…

Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback

Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback

23 February 2026
Nothing shows off the Phone 4a’s refreshed back panel and new Glyph Bar ahead of launch

Nothing shows off the Phone 4a’s refreshed back panel and new Glyph Bar ahead of launch

23 February 2026
The next big car threat is an AI backdoor you can’t detect

The next big car threat is an AI backdoor you can’t detect

23 February 2026
Tech Savvyed
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 Tech Savvyed. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.