• Privacy Policy

News & Promotions

What's going on in your world?

  • Automotive
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Financial
  • Health
  • Home Builder
  • Humor & Memes
  • Insurance
  • Parenting
  • Restaurants
  • Shopping
    • Coupons
    • Special Offer
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
    • Transportation
    • Weather
  • Mobile Apps
You are here: Home / Technology / CES 2016: Toyota Connecting Smarter Cars with Drivers

CES 2016: Toyota Connecting Smarter Cars with Drivers

January 6, 2016 By Ellen Smith

As cars become smarter and more connected, they’re also confronting a new threat — hacking. While business networks and home internet setups are protected behind passwords and firewalls, connected cars talking to smartphones need to evolve and become as secure.

Seeing this coming, Toyota used CES 2016 to announce next-generation connected vehicle framework with an eye toward greater convenience and increased data security.

Toyota’s new connected vehicle framework will not include the installation of a Data Communication Module (DCM) in a broader range of vehicles starting with 2017 models.

Adding the DCM means connecting Toyota vehicles to cellular telecommunications networks, expanding the cars’ ability to transmit data for products and services.

Toyota will also use the DCMs to provide emergency notification systems as a standard feature in all cars when activated by airbag deployment in a traffic accident.

Source Link

A more connected and constantly online car is also a car more vulnerable to cyber intrusion. So, Toyota will create a Toyota Big Data Center (TBDC) to analyze and process data collected by DCM and use it to deploy services under high-level information security and privacy controls.

Toyota is working with UIEvolution, a leading data collection and security firm to develop a smartphone app which uses vehicle data and provides it to third party service and app providers authorized by Toyota. That enables a customer’s smartphone to access vehicle data in a highly secure environment. Toyota can then offer customers safer and more secure smartphone-car connection services.

Source link

Filed Under: Technology

Please Follow & Like Us :)

Facebook
Facebook
fb-share-icon
Twitter
Visit Us
Follow Me
Tweet
RSS

Recent Posts

Colonial Pipeline reportedly paid millions for slow-ass decryption software

When it comes to ransomware, you don't always get … [Read More...]

Advanced tax strategies for startup founders

Peyton Carr is a financial advisor to founders, … [Read More...]

Here’s How To Add Pronouns To Your Instagram Profile In A Few Simple Steps

Instagram is making it so much easier to share … [Read More...]

Copyright © 2025 · News & Promotions, 538 W. 21 St. #91289 Houston, TX 77008-3642 · All rights reserved · Unsubscribe · Log in

Go to mobile version