NAFA Releases Urgent Cybersecurity Whitepaper

Fleet association offers an overview of how and where vehicles can be compromised and presents a series of recommendations for administrators.

Princeton, NJ, October 13, 2016 --(PR.com)-- The increasing usage of digital tools, connectivity, and platforms in modern automotive products poses a singular challenge to vehicle drivers, owners, and those who supervise fleets of vehicles. Cars, trucks, and the ”Internet-of-things” open multiple attack surfaces for hackers. With semi-autonomous vehicles and impending fully-autonomous vehicles ceding even more control to technology, NAFA Fleet Management Association (NAFA) is speaking out on the subject.

Unparalleled in its commitment to the security of fleets, NAFA presented the webinar ”Fleet Management and the Connected Vehicle” on October 5. Continuing with this mission, NAFA has issued a companion whitepaper. ”Fleet Management and the Connected Vehicle” can be downloaded for free at: http://www.nafa.org/download.php?f=832

No longer just a subject of the science fiction genre, fears regarding cybersecurity and motor vehicles are a present reality demanding attention, concern, and an educated response. "Cars and trucks today are more like ’computers on wheels,’ as they rely more and more on technology for performance and convenience than ever before," said NAFA Chief Executive Officer Phillip E. Russo, CAE. "For fleet professionals, the rapid growth of vehicle connectivity presents challenges, as well as opportunities. For all drivers, the way North American roadways — and indeed, global roadways — function will be drastically different sooner than anyone imagines. This is a conversation that NAFA has a duty to be part of."

The whitepaper "Fleet Management and the Connected Vehicle" offers an overview of how and where vehicles can be compromised — through electronic control units, wireless communication, telematics, direct access to On-Board Diagnostic (OBD II) Ports — and presents a series of recommendations for fleet administrators. These recommendations also are proposed to legislators to start a conversation. The Association feels that there is an all too brief window of time to act, and wants to facilitate change before a major crisis occurs.

"NAFA is a proactive organization that takes on the major challenges from the start, and the issue of cybersecurity is a perfect example,” concluded Russo. ”It is our hope that everyone downloads the whitepaper, is informed, and will spread this knowledge and help make vehicles safer and more secure.”

"Fleet Management and the Connected Vehicle" can be downloaded for free at: http://www.nafa.org/download.php?f=832

About NAFA Fleet Management Association
NAFA is the association for professionals who manage fleets of sedans, public safety vehicles, trucks, and buses of all types and sizes, and a wide range of military and off-road equipment for organizations in North America and across the globe. NAFA’s members are responsible for the specification, acquisition, maintenance, repair, fueling, risk management, and remarketing of more than 4.6 million vehicles that drive an estimated 50 billion miles each year. NAFA’s members control assets and services well in excess of $100 billion each year.

NAFA’s members manage fleets for corporations covering a wide range of manufacturing and service organizations, governments (whether local, state and/or federal), and public service entities (public safety, law enforcement, educational institutions, utilities, etc.); still other members serve financial institutions, insurance companies, non-profit organizations, and the like. For more information, please visit http://www.nafa.org.
Contact
NAFA Fleet Management Association
Donald Dunphy
609.986.1063
www.nafa.org
ContactContact
Categories