Investigation comes after Norway found Yutong vehicles could be ‘stopped or rendered inoperable’ by Chinese company ...
The UK government is reportedly investigating buses made by Chinese company Yutong after a Norwegian study raised concerns ...
Denmark's Movia transport company runs 262 Yutong buses in its fleet. It, too, is quite concerned about the potential for ...
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Norway transport firm steps up controls after tests show Chinese-made buses can be halted remotely
A leading Norwegian public transport operator has said it will introduce stricter security requirements and step up ...
Bus providers in Denmark and Norway are urgently investigating what they say is a security loophole in electric buses made in ...
Norway, Denmark, and the UK are investigating buses from China’s Yutong over fears they could be disabled remotely.
The UK is to investigate whether hundreds of these Chinese-made Yutong buses can be controlled remotely by their manufacturer ...
About three months ago, the Norwegian authority that runs Oslo’s public transport network secretly took two buses for a test ...
According to experts, if the manufacturer could deactivate the buses, it would likely wreak havoc on Britain’s transport ...
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 buses showed the ...
Imagine waiting at a bus stop, checking your watch, and thinking: is the vehicle late, or did someone in another country hit ...
As vehicles grow ever more connected, a new kind of security concern is taking shape. In Norway, public buses built by a Chinese manufacturer have become a focal point of that debate. Even thousands ...
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