Polish Hackers Repaired Trains the Manufacturer Artificially Bricked. Now The Train Company Is Threatening Them (www.404media.co)
from btp@kbin.social to technology@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 17:04
https://kbin.social/m/technology@lemmy.world/t/700741

In one of the coolest and more outrageous repair stories in quite some time, three white-hat hackers helped a regional rail company in southwest Poland unbrick a train that had been artificially rendered inoperable by the train’s manufacturer after an independent maintenance company worked on it. The train’s manufacturer is now threatening to sue the hackers who were hired by the independent repair company to fix it.

After breaking trains simply because an independent repair shop had worked on them, NEWAG is now demanding that trains fixed by hackers be removed from service.

#drm #technology

threaded - newest

andrewrgross@slrpnk.net on 13 Dec 2023 17:17 next collapse

That’s awesome. Man, fuck that company. Bricking a train? Outrageous.

thefartographer@lemm.ee on 13 Dec 2023 18:02 next collapse

Run by fucking criminals. We should brick them like they’re The Sticky Bandits

AlwaysNowNeverNotMe@kbin.social on 13 Dec 2023 19:07 next collapse

Better to brick them like The Cask of Amontillado.

pelotron@midwest.social on 13 Dec 2023 20:05 collapse

Great idea, Marv.

Bizarroland@kbin.social on 13 Dec 2023 20:23 collapse

Poland ought to ban that company from ever working or operating or selling any products inside of its country and any trains made by that company that are not currently owned by Poland should be prevented from traveling on the tracks that cross through Poland.

funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works on 13 Dec 2023 21:37 next collapse

unfortunately they have a right wing government so it’s likely they’ll want more of this not less

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 21:59 collapse

They just swore in the new Cabinet today. They still have a far right President and Judiciary to contend with but the legislature is a coalition of centrists and leftists now.

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 11:11 collapse

I was wondering why Orban “left the room” when the EU Council voted for initiating membership negotiations with Ukraine (thus abstaining) rather than vote against it (and thus veto it) and thought that maybe he didn’t have Poland covering his back anymore (in the sense of stopping later reprisals if he blocked it), at least when it came to his pro-Russia posture.

Now given that change in Poland, I’m thinking it’s a much more far reaching thing and Hungary is now much closer to have their rights suspended as an EU Member.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 20:36 collapse

Yes, however there is still a natural resistance to kicking anyone out of a political entity. Just because nobody wants to start those conversations for fear of their name getting floated.

BearOfaTime@lemm.ee on 13 Dec 2023 23:32 next collapse

Maybe make it the entire executive and senior management, rather than the company.

SpookyUnderwear@eviltoast.org on 14 Dec 2023 01:04 next collapse

This is the kind of government intervention I can get behind. This story is so outrageous, it’s hard to believe it’s true.

psud@aussie.zone on 14 Dec 2023 09:12 next collapse

I feel like train operators will have heard of this, and will not be accepting that company’s tenders

vinhill@feddit.de on 15 Dec 2023 11:18 collapse

Realistically, that would be quite an overreaction and the corporation does have valuable knowledge and skill in creating trains. But how great it would be if this were to cause open source code to be a requirement…

ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 17:18 next collapse

This story should be on every newspaper front page right below war correspondents.

FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 17:19 next collapse

right below war correspondents

Eh, they should report war on the same page as the weather if you ask me.

metaStatic@kbin.social on 13 Dec 2023 17:34 next collapse

in the sport section

Go Team Go.

FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 17:47 next collapse

That does make more sense.

AlwaysNowNeverNotMe@kbin.social on 13 Dec 2023 19:05 collapse

Put the election polling there too.

obinice@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 20:54 next collapse

Let us know what country you’re in, so the next time you’re invaded and genocided we’ll remember it’s barely as important as the weather forecast.

Starglasses@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 13 Dec 2023 22:37 next collapse

I think the idea is that people check the weather So they will actually see it. Like, I never read the sports section, but if there was a tidbit on the weather page I might click it.

Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 13 Dec 2023 22:49 collapse

That’s generous but their user history makes it pretty obvious that they’re mad about aid being sent at all when it could go to paying off their student loan debt instead.

force@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 23:33 next collapse

as if those are mutually exclusive things to have lol

trolololol@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 01:03 collapse

Why not both?

Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Dec 2023 01:06 collapse

Ask them, I think it’s stupid as shit to frame them as mutually exclusive choices.

Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml on 14 Dec 2023 06:31 collapse

My reading of that was “climate change will kill most of our species in the long term if we don’t take it seriously, so that’s also something very important to track and belongs on the same page as wars.”.

tsonfeir@lemm.ee on 14 Dec 2023 03:07 collapse

Well, climate change is front page news…

Lev_Astov@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 07:10 collapse

Yeah, especially in the EU where apparently their laws regarding circumventing DRM might make the people who fixed this the bad guys instead of this comically evil manufacturer who put GPS kill switches on public passenger trains.

WashedOver@lemmy.ca on 13 Dec 2023 17:35 next collapse

I wonder if they were taking notes from John Deere and the automotive industry or will it be the reverse here soon?

Just imagine all these vehicles that could be bricked for not going back to the stealerships for outrageous prices on parts and incompetent service.

Also the vehicles that could be disabled for not paying for device protection plan that allows your vehicle to operate safely. It would be a shame if your vehicle stopped working on your way to work or the hospital.

I suspect Tesla, BMW, and John Deere are the closest to this reality.

I sure hope the government doesn’t help with another great cash for clunkers national program to get rid of more cars too old for these measures. Sure is a great way to drive new car sales though…

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 22:05 next collapse

Oh don’t count GM and a Ford out of it. They’re already kicking android auto and Apple car to the curb so they can control more stuff and get access to more data. The savvier they get the closer that comes to reality.

Of course, by the end of our lives you won’t own a car at all. You’ll subscribe to a car company that will act like a hybrid ride share and rental program. Commutes will be on a rideshare basis and you’ll be able to rent a car for a weekend road trip.

WashedOver@lemmy.ca on 13 Dec 2023 22:35 collapse

I just heard about GM this morning in my tech news. I didn’t realize that about Ford too.

I’ve drawn a line in the sand with my vehicles at about 2011 for tech. I love tech and I love cars but just not into the current versions of everything being touch screen controls.

Give me knobs for climate controls, gear shifters, and gauges for the rest. They don’t need all of these computer systems that fail or become outdated as soon as they are released like the manufacturer’s nav systems. We also don’t need them to stop working completely because a sensor failed and can only be replaced by the dealer.

My phone in a holder can be the smartest part of the car for me thanks.

guacupado@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 22:44 next collapse

I think you can go further. My 2017 A4 is still “normal.”

WashedOver@lemmy.ca on 13 Dec 2023 22:50 collapse

I’m glad to hear that. Often I’ve driven rental cars and *last time I struggled to find the gear shifter which was replaced by buttons on the dash.

I’ve also seen just a video of a Tesla only new driver struggle to drive a ICE car because it had a gear shifter and didn’t automatically brake. I’m feeling like a dinosaur now…

BearOfaTime@lemm.ee on 13 Dec 2023 23:34 collapse

Stop reading my mind.

You can pry my older cars from my cold, dead, hand.

helenslunch@feddit.nl on 14 Dec 2023 04:02 next collapse

John Deere was hardly the first. We introduced legislation to regulate the automotive industry in 1994.

Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz on 14 Dec 2023 06:25 collapse

If the manufacturer can stop your trains, then obviously anyone with the necessary hacking skills can do it too. Certain governments might be very interested in tampering with the logistics of another country.

BloodSlut@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 17:49 next collapse

“We didn’t add a kill switch to our trains to force the use of our maintenance service, but fuck the hackers that removed the kill switch we didn’t implement, and the trains that were hacked and don’t have the kill switch we didn’t add should be removed from service.”

Th3D3k0y@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 17:54 next collapse

Dear Reader,

Regarding your recent free and non-profitable un-fucking of our problem, please use the honor system and manually refuck yourself.

Love, Technology Companies.

thefartographer@lemm.ee on 13 Dec 2023 22:35 next collapse

Someone’s gonna figure out a horror movie for this called The Refucker

ASeriesOfPoorChoices@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 06:18 collapse

Wasn’t free - they were paid to hack it.

But yeah.

pirat@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 20:38 collapse

Could be free as in freedom, as opposed to free as in beer?

ASeriesOfPoorChoices@lemmy.world on 16 Dec 2023 03:40 collapse

But freedom isn’t free. Costs a buckofive.

pirat@lemmy.world on 16 Dec 2023 20:03 collapse

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gratis_versus_libre

ASeriesOfPoorChoices@lemmy.world on 17 Dec 2023 02:54 collapse
Jessvj93@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 21:26 collapse

“And how dare those hackers go through all the trouble of finding those (literal) GPS coordinates of train maintenance centers not in our system to circumvent us getting more money.”

roguetrick@kbin.social on 13 Dec 2023 17:59 next collapse

SPS became desperate and Googled “Polish hackers” and came across a group called Dragon Sector, a reverse-engineering team made up of white hat hackers.

Hilarious. I hope 404 continues with this level of high quality journalism.

Dragon sector, who they hired, is a security capture the flag team.

https://dragonsector.pl/

Edit: Socials of those who worked on it

https://social.hackerspace.pl/@q3k
https://infosec.exchange/@mrtick
https://infosec.exchange/@redford

sukhmel@programming.dev on 13 Dec 2023 22:06 next collapse

TIL that [security CTF](…wikipedia.org/…/Capture_the_flag_(cybersecurity\…) is

an exercise in which participants attempt to find text strings, called “flags”, which are secretly hidden in purposefully-vulnerable programs or websites

Never heard of this and I may not be alone in that. Thanks for pointing this out.

khannie@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 22:14 collapse

I did one before. They are SO MUCH FUN. Now I have too many children.

sob

edit: There are other ways of capturing the flag like having your team name on the home page of a local web server or whatever.

Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml on 14 Dec 2023 06:34 collapse

You make it sound like the event ends in an orgy.

trashgirlfriend@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 07:17 collapse

The good ones do

verity_kindle@sh.itjust.works on 13 Dec 2023 22:23 collapse

Finally, hackers with a cool name, like Bellingcat or Oryx. It’s all I’m asking for, but the Russian and North Korean hackers are so disappointing in so many ways.

SnipingNinja@slrpnk.net on 14 Dec 2023 04:33 collapse

When the government bankrolls you, you’re not allowed to have fun.

Syo@kbin.social on 13 Dec 2023 18:00 next collapse

Steam engine breaks, you can fix it.

Steam engine with digital circuit breaks, you're a hacker, a pirate. DRM was a mistake.

Player2@sopuli.xyz on 13 Dec 2023 18:09 next collapse

But how else could companies make more money off of something you already paid for? Will someone think of the shareholders‽

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 11:16 collapse

If you’re allowed to do any maintenance you want on the physical components of something you own, then you should be allowed to do any maintenance you want on the software components of something you own.

It’s not hacking (in the sense of “unauthorized intrusion”) if you own it or have authorization to do it from the owner of it.

alphacyberranger@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 18:02 next collapse

If anybody wants to know more, they can watch it here www.youtube.com/watch?v=w8NqBXT6Kos

PipedLinkBot@feddit.rocks on 13 Dec 2023 18:02 next collapse

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

https://www.piped.video/watch?v=w8NqBXT6Kos

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

YoorWeb@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 01:58 collapse

Ah, Louis Rossmann, a real-life superhero. He did some great work in his career.

model_tar_gz@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 03:27 collapse

Why are you referring to him in the past tense? AFAIK he and his cat are still ranting about tech rights on the daily.

alphacyberranger@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 10:06 collapse

Don’t forget his friend Foxy

rynzcycle@kbin.social on 13 Dec 2023 18:40 next collapse

Is anyone else hearing Aquarela do Brasil or is it just me...

yamanii@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 20:07 next collapse

The anti-circumvention clause is being abused for some years now, it’s disgusting.

psud@aussie.zone on 14 Dec 2023 09:10 next collapse

This is the sort of case that can fix it

lolcatnip@reddthat.com on 14 Dec 2023 16:25 next collapse

Is it abuse, or is it working exactly as intended?

KeenFlame@feddit.nu on 15 Dec 2023 10:20 collapse

They mean it’s abusive in nature I guess

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 11:18 collapse

So which anti-circumvention clause do you mean?

Remember, US law doesn’t apply in Europe and as much as I know there is nothing like that in the EU.

NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 20:28 next collapse

Nowadays satire can never be as good as reality is.

Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz on 14 Dec 2023 06:22 collapse

Trump and the whole Brexit circus have set a very high bar, but somehow someone still manages to produce quality comedy.

DacoTaco@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 20:57 next collapse

The person is doing a talk about it in hamburg, germany (37c3) next week. Its on my to watch list because that sounds hella interresting.

Edit : 37c3 list of talks : halfnarp.events.ccc.de/#dec115da17562cebafa9ba7a1…

khannie@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 22:09 next collapse

That actually does sound hella interesting. I’m saving your comment to try to remember but actually look it up in about two years when I scroll back though my saved posts.

verity_kindle@sh.itjust.works on 13 Dec 2023 22:19 next collapse

Same, same.

YoorWeb@lemmy.world on 13 Dec 2023 23:02 next collapse

youtube.com/@mediacccde

PipedLinkBot@feddit.rocks on 13 Dec 2023 23:02 next collapse

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

https://piped.video/@mediacccde

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

Holyginz@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 00:04 collapse

Went to subscribe to it until I remembered i don’t speak German lol

example@reddthat.com on 14 Dec 2023 00:50 next collapse

nearly all talks are either in English or have English translations. not sure if they’re available on YouTube but you should be able to find everything on media.ccc.de

isVeryLoud@lemmy.ca on 14 Dec 2023 03:28 collapse

Time to learn!

helenslunch@feddit.nl on 14 Dec 2023 03:58 next collapse

I’m saving your comment to try to remember their comment to try to remember to watch that.

DacoTaco@lemmy.world on 03 Mar 2024 12:02 collapse

Consider this a reminder :p

foyrkopp@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 06:57 next collapse

C3 talks are available online for quite some time after the actual event, so you might still be able to watch it then.

barsoap@lemm.ee on 14 Dec 2023 10:19 collapse

Where “quite some time” is “indefinite”. Proper archives go back to 2002, 19c3.

Takes some time for stuff to show up in the archives though as start+end get cut manually, while the congress is running there’s always an archive of raw steam dumps maybe that’s the one you mean.

threelonmusketeers@sh.itjust.works on 14 Dec 2023 07:38 collapse

Does Lemmy not have a “remind me” bot yet?

pwalker@discuss.tchncs.de on 14 Dec 2023 05:37 collapse

It’s 37c3, but thx for the hint. The talk is called Breaking “DRM” in Polish trains by Redford, q3k, MrTick

I will try to watch it on stage, unfortunately still no final schedule available

DacoTaco@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 05:52 collapse

Fixed the edition number. I always forget what number we are at haha. I will not be on site, but i saved it in my planner : halfnarp.events.ccc.de/#dec115da17562cebafa9ba7a1…

barsoap@lemm.ee on 14 Dec 2023 10:11 collapse

The numbering got a bit messed up as there weren’t chaos covid congresses.

helenslunch@feddit.nl on 13 Dec 2023 23:28 next collapse

This reminds me of the hacked McDonalds ice cream machines. Except the shitty manufacturers won that one.

damirK@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 03:44 collapse

Sadly they will probably win this as well. Some claim there could safety concerns and it isn’t certified or could damage their brand… time for people’s manufacturing of products? Hehe

Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 07:24 next collapse

But if the people controlled the means of production… that would be…

WallEx@feddit.de on 14 Dec 2023 07:34 next collapse

I’m not firm in polish law, do they have the same laws as in the USA? Because that’s what you’re comparing right?

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 11:04 collapse

As far as I know, there is no such thing as DMCA provisions against working around software protection mechanisms in the EU and in fact at an EU level the direction is to increase ownership rights, not decrease them.

However depending on the contract the train company might not legally own those trains (for example, it’s structured as a Lease), but if the hackers can show proof that the train company authorized them to do those changes it would be a case against the train company, not the hackers.

psud@aussie.zone on 14 Dec 2023 09:05 next collapse

I think this one might go well. Company preventing a country’s trains from being serviced by a third party. I expect that train builder has already tanked their business, but it would be an interesting one to be litigated, the sort of case that can get the law changed

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 10:59 collapse

This is an EU country, not the US.

Things like the DMCA provisions forbidding working around IP protection mechanisms (and software is copyrighted) don’t apply here.

IANAL (so take this it with a pinch), unless the trains are legally theirs rather than the train company’s, it’s not hacking, it’s just “software maintenance” and the only right this company has here is to withdraw product warranties because of “unauthorized changes”.

There might or not be a case against the train company (for example, if the contract forbade this or the train company tried to sell those trains onwards as if they were original) but not against the people who did the software changes on the trains when authorized by the owners of said trains.

damirK@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 23:18 collapse

I assume EU has safety regulations and if a train suddenly loses its brakes they would be liable wouldn’t they? Now they can say someone has “hacked the train” and they can’t guarantee the brakes will work. I am not sure where the USA argument came from

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 16 Dec 2023 13:54 collapse

The responsability of circulating with a vehicle that abides by safety regulations is of the owners, not the makers.

You’ll notice that even in the consumer auto segment (which, since run-of-the-mill consumers are not expected to be “experts”, has lots of of ways to make sure that brand new cars are sold already pre-certified “road-worthy” because normal consumers don’t have the know-how to make sure of it themselves), the actual car owners still have the responsability of having a periodic inspection done to the car and repair those things that stop it from being road-worthy and they cannot circulate with it in a public road if it’s not compliant (at least that is the case in Europe).

Outside the consumer segment, I expect that the rules for trains are pretty similar to those for commercial aviation: the manufacturer has no responsability beyond a contractual one (i.e. the purchasing entity probably demands contractually that the vehicles they get comply with regulations, the parts they buy obbey certain specifications and maintenance done by a manufacturer-certified shop delivers a compliant vehicle) and all the regulatory responsability is in the hands of the owner (more specifically the “operator”, as for example for leased planes the airline doesn’t actually own them but they do operate them hence they’re the ones with regulatory responsabilities).

The USA argument comes from the anti-circunvention legislation for software being part of the DMCA law, said legislation giving rights to the makers of the software to stop changes to it even in devices they do not own. Where such legislation does not apply there is no law forbidding somebody doing whatever changes they want to software as long as they own the device containing said software or have the authorization of the owner of the device whose software they are changing - the only applicable legislation here is Copyright and that only limits the distribution of the software, not the changing of it.

It’s not at all unusual for Americans to argue that people can’t legally circumvent software protections even in devices they own, because that is indeed the case in their country thanks to the DMCA, but expecting that to be the case in Poland doesn’t make sense as the laws there are not at all the same as in the US.

damirK@lemmy.world on 16 Dec 2023 19:35 collapse

That’s a whole lot of energy spent based on completely incorrect assumptions about me or what I was saying so your argument can work. But sure whatever makes you feel like you are right.

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 17 Dec 2023 01:02 collapse

That’s a very weird take.

You don’t know me and went all weirdly personal full of assumptions about me and without making an actual argument.

Whatever is going on there, it’s all in your head.

sanqueue@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 03:57 next collapse

This is good. Someone did that for printers too

Lemminary@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 06:04 collapse

And American Weight (?) digital scales. The ones that brick themselves after 2,000 uses because how dare you only pay once.

jucelc@lemmy.wtf on 14 Dec 2023 07:17 next collapse

Lol. Always suspected there was a scam there, but every time I bring it up in a conversation - people just call me a conspiracy theorist.

This goes for pretty much everything though. Planned obsolescence is real, but people think it’s just the natural way of things.

DeafeningDistance@feddit.ch on 14 Dec 2023 10:37 collapse

is there an article about this? Would love to read about it

Lemminary@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 15:21 collapse

There is no article that I could find, so I guess you take my word for it. But I’ll fill you in on why I said it from what I remember. You can make up your mind on this:

I was looking for a digital scale during the pandemic and naturally went on Amazon. I found some within my budget (I live outside the US) but most of them had multiple reviews complaining about a weird error that they couldn’t fix. I did some digging around, yet nobody seemed to know what the error really was that was showing up after some time of prolonged use without signs of wear. Eventually, I got to a thread on some technical forum that said it was a software error that strongly hinted at planned obsolescence after so many uses.

The weird thing is that I can’t find any of the models that had this on Amazon anymore but it doesn’t surprise me after some of the shit I’ve seen on there with people manipulating reviews on other products I’ve bought. So I guess it could go either way for someone review-bombing the product or it being a real issue, but that doesn’t explain the error showing up on other sites. I wish I could remember what the error code was.

If anybody knows anything more about this, I’d love to hear it. It certainly was a strange surprise that ended up costing me a bit more than I was planning to spend. But I guess bullet dodged?

vsh@lemm.ee on 14 Dec 2023 06:57 next collapse

I thought white hat hackers only do their shitty CTF exercise everyday. Wouldn’t hacking a DRM’ed national train be a black hat interaction? I’d like to know if that company can press charges.

Lev_Astov@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 07:00 next collapse

If you RTFA, they were paid by the repair company who was paid by the private train operator to fix the train. In doing so, they reverse engineered the hardware/firmware and found the DRM added by the manufacturer to prevent the repair company from doing the repairs by bricking the train.

Adanisi@lemmy.zip on 14 Dec 2023 09:29 next collapse

Yes yes, how dare they unbrick public transportation infrastructure.

Fuck off.

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 11:22 next collapse

If the train owner allowed it, it’s just maintenance that happens to affect software.

Hacking would be if it was not authorized by the owner.

Any maintenance not authorized by the train maker entitles them at most to suspend the Warranty.

firefly@neon.nightbulb.net on 14 Dec 2023 13:23 collapse

@btp@kbin.social

If anything perhaps everyone involved should sue the train manufacturer for bricking the train with their DRM nonsense.

"Dragon Sector" is an OG name for a hacker firm.

"we discovered a ‘workshop-detection’ system built into the train software, which bricked the trains after some conditions were met (two of the trains even used a list of precise GPS coordinates of competitors' workshops)."

That is an anti-trust violation du jure. I wonder what kind of anti-trust laws Poland has.

Ruscal@sh.itjust.works on 14 Dec 2023 07:47 next collapse

badcyber.com/dieselgate-but-for-trains-some-heavy… link for very detailed description of this story, highly recommend the read!

[deleted] on 14 Dec 2023 11:15 next collapse

.

SCB@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 16:42 collapse

Thank you! Came here to ask if anyone had one source with the whole story. This keeps trickling out as it evolves.

Edit: this story is considerably weirder than I expected, and I was already expecting some weird shit.

Begs the question: How is any of this legal?

Ruscal@sh.itjust.works on 15 Dec 2023 08:28 collapse

I would assume it is not, UE has some strict rules about fair competition, but the problem is to prove that in the court. Newag is arguing that the hacked and reverse engineered code is not the code they have. Probably in the meantime they run the cleaning protocol in the company…
But company’s public image will hopefully suffer from the story, maybe at least they loose in eyes of potential buyers.

simin@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 10:15 next collapse

the world’s not one’s to fix, learn to protect yourself.

whoisearth@lemmy.ca on 14 Dec 2023 16:38 collapse

No the current model everywhere is to pay a vendor. I’m sure someone can get KPMG or Deloitte to fix the world.

[deleted] on 16 Dec 2023 12:45 collapse

.

EdibleFriend@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 16:47 next collapse

I hate this fucking planet.

DuckOverload@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 16:51 collapse

I think this is pretty cool. Sure, capitalists are gonna capitalist, but here we have subversive moves in a positive direction.

EdibleFriend@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 17:14 collapse

Oh yeah what the people did to get around this is fucking awesome I do love that side of this story don’t get me wrong.

Dio9sys@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Dec 2023 16:49 next collapse

I like how, instead of recognizing that they got caught, now the train manufacturer is claiming this is some kind of dark PR strategy.

If it is, then please show the public that it’s a dark PR strategy by explaining the hidden unlock codes and the DRM code!

RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 18:36 next collapse

If they required the trains to be serviced by manufacturer they should have written it into a mandatory service contract at time of sales.

btr_fan87@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 19:36 next collapse

Artificially bricked?! Who the hell keeps giving Viagra to trains? Evil bastards.

xytaruka@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 2023 20:01 next collapse

Sir Toppam Hat

ShitOnABrick@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 09:03 collapse

Where did the independent repair shop and cracker smackers touch you on the doll NEWAG 14WE EMU

zockerr@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 09:46 next collapse

Every time I read about this kerfuffle, I am astounded by the sheer stupidity of the manufacturer. Even if they may be technically in the right here(I don’t know, since the contracts they have with the operator aren’t public), they effectively shoot themselves in the foot with this PR Desaster. Especially the various national rail operators across Europe will think twice about buying NEWAG, since these operators usually have their own maintenance and repair centers, and expect to service their rolling stock there. And those national operators still make up the lion’s share of the European rail market.

DSTGU@lemm.ee on 15 Dec 2023 11:07 collapse

This aint much of a problem. NEWAG operates almost exclusively on the internal market

maynarkh@feddit.nl on 15 Dec 2023 11:31 collapse

I sure hope that they become a political talking point where the government loses votes if they contract with them again.

FangedWyvern42@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 2023 10:16 next collapse

Most ethical vehicle manufacturer:

(This is a joke)

KeenFlame@feddit.nu on 15 Dec 2023 10:26 next collapse

Spewing bs about how they can’t guarantee the safety and other outrageous shit pouring out their mouths as they provide clearly practiced lawyerspeak to squeeze money from public service into their owners pockets which will then be invested probably in war and killing children for profit.

But let’s discuss ethics and shit! Fuck faces need to be brought to moral justice for the evil they commit every day of their brainwashed miserable hateful lives where they pretend to not harm people because they don’t do it themselves but via money grabbing schemes. One day all of this shit will seem to be as stupid as hitting kids are these days

arc@lemm.ee on 15 Dec 2023 11:29 collapse

Apparently there was some kind of gps geo fencing going on - that the software detected the train went into an uncertified repair yard and bricked the thing. So I assume the hackers just purged that info, or unset the flags that denoted the brick condition so as far as the train software was concerned it was operating normally.

It’s an interesting hack but there is a safety aspect to this too. A train is a complex machine that could go catastrophically wrong and kill a bunch of people. It’s not quite Boeing 737 levels of safety criticality but neither is it something that should be taken lightly with regards to service procedure or parts procurement. So the manufacturer were being dicks to brick the train. But the train operator using an unauthorised repairer who might not have access to, let alone follow the correct servicing procedures or parts is not good either.