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Symantec Introduces IoT Cybersecurity Protection for Connected Cars

Symantec introduced cybersecurity protection for connected cars, the company announced. Called Anomaly Detection for Automotive, the product protects against “zero-day attacks” and other security vulnerabilities unique to the connected car. Zero-day attacks are so named because a defender against those attacks has zero days to come up with a fix once a security flaw becomes widely exploited. “Connected cars offer drivers conveniences such as navigation, remote roadside assistance and mobile internet hot spots,” Symantec said Wednesday, citing Gartner forecasts of 220 million connected cars on the road globally in 2020. Though new connected-car technologies “promise to enhance the driving experience, these advancements also create avenues of attack for hackers that can endanger drivers and passengers,” Symantec said. Its product uses machine learning to provide “passive in-vehicle security analytics” that monitor all “controller area network” bus traffic without disrupting normal vehicle operations, the company said. Since the product learns “what normal behavior is,” it’s able to “flag anomalous activity that may indicate an attack,” it said: “The solution works with virtually any automotive make and model.”