EV Charging
Cybersecurity statistics about ev charging
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DrainDead portable EV battery siphoning rig was built for approximately €1,200 using a solar inverter and CCS adapter
Ultra-Fast Wireless Charging attack synchronises with the charger's signal within only three cycles, defeating frequency hopping countermeasures
Most EVs in DrainDead testing allowed indefinite battery siphoning with repeated session resets; only some (e.g. Volkswagen group) halted discharging after around 60 seconds
Ultra-Fast Wireless Charging hack drew 76%+ of the power intended for a legitimate EV from inductive chargers
ChargePoint Home Flex flaw (ZDI-26-197) allows unauthenticated network-adjacent remote code execution as root via OCPP message handling
Quarkslab's audit of EVerest open-source EV charging stack found 6 high-severity, 6 medium-severity, 5 low-severity and 3 informational issues
Ultra-Fast Wireless Charging hack drained 76% of EV power on the Alpitronic HYC50 commercial DC fast charger