RedDakooter05
Well-Known Member
Boy I sure do miss the days of radios that that just worked.
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ADC, ESC, SAC, AFIORetired AFSOC
That's apparently one of the less serious bugs people are encountering. If Cyan Labs is warning people off that version, I'll wait until they can push an official version that works out the door. :\I just installed the map update, it restarted once then said it was updating again. When all was done the message told me I had a sync update so I checked and I still have the same version of sync, but the screen boots up much faster then it did before the update. Maps is the new version.
Wait! Where's the 8 track????Boy I sure do miss the days of radios that that just worked.
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Boy I sure do miss the days of radios that that just worked.
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I did 2 years with the 449th AMS at Kincheloe AFB, Michigan before I went to F4s in Germany. ??I did a little time (thankfully) with SAC...416th FMS Griffiss AFB
There is a reason I never turned WiFi on in my truck..Found this today entirely by accident. "Ford learned from a supplier that a security researcher discovered a vulnerability in the Wi-Fi software driver supplied for use in the SYNC 3 infotainment system available on some Ford and Lincoln vehicles. Immediately, and in collaboration with them, we began developing and validating measures to address the vulnerability."
No idea how far back this goes, but I'm guessing that ALL Sync 3 vehicles including vehicles still on 3.0 are vulnerable.  While they say it would not affect the safety of vehicle occupants, since the infotainment system is firewalled from controls like steering, throttling and braking, there obviously seems to be a reason for concern as they want us to turn off WiFi functionality.
https://media.ford.com/content/ford...uidance-in-response-to-supplier-disclosu.html
John, its apparently a Texas Instrument driver problem, not a hardware issue. "Tracked as CVE-2023-29468, the bug impacts the Texas Instruments-supplied Wi-Fi driver used in the infotainment system of at least a dozen vehicles." And the author in Bleeping Computers didn't get it entirely right when he listed vehicles as it affects all Ford AND Lincoln vehicles with Sync 3, whether its a 2016 Lincoln vehicle running Sync 3.0 or a 2023 Ford running Sync 3.4. They all use that same TI driver. His point later on is that many other types of systems (buildings, ships, aircraft, etc.) could all be impacted by TI's WiFi driver vulnerability, as apparently its in fairly widespread use, a point on which he could very well be correct. Ford could very well be just the proverbial tip of the iceberg.I wonder if there was a hardware change due to supply issues for the chips they were using that is causing the issue only on newer APIMs. I noticed the years were only the most recent, even though the models listed have been made more years than the notice included. That could explain a couple things, 1) why the wifi issue is only listing new models, perhaps there was a different chipset in the older radios. 2) Some driver was missing for the newer hardware chipset in the 22251 update resulting in the bricked state. I doubt Ford will give full details though, they almost never to.
Vandyland, one of the best kept secrets in the AF.We spent 6 years on Vandenburg AFB
since its fire walled from the important stuff, they can break in and change my station while I am listening to a really good song?Found this today entirely by accident. "Ford learned from a supplier that a security researcher discovered a vulnerability in the Wi-Fi software driver supplied for use in the SYNC 3 infotainment system available on some Ford and Lincoln vehicles. Immediately, and in collaboration with them, we began developing and validating measures to address the vulnerability."
No idea how far back this goes, but I'm guessing that ALL Sync 3 vehicles including vehicles still on 3.0 are vulnerable.  While they say it would not affect the safety of vehicle occupants, since the infotainment system is firewalled from controls like steering, throttling and braking, there obviously seems to be a reason for concern as they want us to turn off WiFi functionality.
https://media.ford.com/content/ford...uidance-in-response-to-supplier-disclosu.html
I was not saying it's a hardware issue, just that there could have been a silent hardware change due to availability of chips. perhaps someone forgot the driver for the chip in the newer system in the updated software package. I would have to think there is some difference between the 2021 I have and the 2022-2023 since mine still shows 55521 as an update while the newer Rangers do not.John, its apparently a Texas Instrument driver problem, not a hardware issue. "Tracked as CVE-2023-29468, the bug impacts the Texas Instruments-supplied Wi-Fi driver used in the infotainment system of at least a dozen vehicles." And the author in Bleeping Computers didn't get it entirely right when he listed vehicles as it affects all Ford AND Lincoln vehicles with Sync 3, whether its a 2016 Lincoln vehicle running Sync 3.0 or a 2023 Ford running Sync 3.4. They all use that same TI driver. His point later on is that many other types of systems (buildings, ships, aircraft, etc.) could all be impacted by TI's WiFi driver vulnerability, as apparently its in fairly widespread use, a point on which he could very well be correct. Ford could very well be just the proverbial tip of the iceberg.
I am a professional in the embedded security world, over 25 years of experience designing, developing, testing, and supporting device drivers on embedded computer boards.since its fire walled from the important stuff, they can break in and change my station while I am listening to a really good song?
dirty rotten no good hackers LOL I am sure they will push a new driver Long before it becomes an issue![]()
As retired AF/DoD cybersecurity professional that helped develop the original NIST SP 800-171 standards, I find your remarks to be more than a little presumptive. You are declaring this to be NOT a critical issue at all in your "professional opinion". Personally, I would never presume to make that determination without access to all relevant data. So I'm "assuming" that your have ALL of the relevant information pertaining to this issue, even though this is still in the most preliminary stages of investigation?I also see that because there is no exploit against this device driver that this is NOT a critical issue at all.