Hundreds of Porsches across Russia stopped working after unexplained satellite outage

midian182

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WTF?! In another cautionary tale about everything becoming unnecessarily tech-filled and connected, hundreds of Porsches across Russia were completely bricked recently due to a mysterous satellite security system malfunction. The exact cause of the problem is still being investigated, and while there is no evidence that it was a deliberate attack, some say it's a possibility.

At the end of November, Porsche owners in cities across Russia found their luxury vehicles wouldn't start or were shutting themselves down soon after ignition.

Russia's largest dealership, Rolf, later confirmed that the problem was due to a loss of satellite connectivity to the Vehicle Tracking System (VTS) onboard module.

Once connection is lost, the vehicle's system believes an attempted theft is taking place and automatically activates security measures such as locking down the engine and cutting fuel delivery.

"Currently, there is no connection for all models and types of internal combustion engines," Rolf's service director Yulia Trushkova told the Russian publication RBC.

The problem affects any Porsche built after 2013 that is factory fitted with the VTS module.

Some owners have been able to restore their cars' functionality by manually disabling or rebooting the VTS system. Others found that disabling the battery for up to 10 hours also worked. Some dealerships have reportedly issued a fix for impacted cars, which involves partially dismantling them to access the alarm units.

Like almost all western companies, Porsche suspended sales in Russia following the country's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, though it does still own three local subsidiaries that it has been unable to sell.

Only Porsches within Russia experienced the malfunction. A Rolf spokesperson said "It's possible this was done deliberately," but did not provide any evidence.

The incident is another reminder of the potential risks that come as carmakers pack their vehicles with more tech. In this case, it was the connected vehicle security system that failed, but we've also seen studies on how modern cars are privacy nightmares.

In 2024, we heard how connected cars with built-in telematics share driver statistics and data with insurers, often without the owners even realizing it.

In a related story, there were reports last month that Europe is investigating whether electric buses made in China and being used on EU roads could be remotely shut down by their manufacturer.

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One thing I will give Ford credit for, you can yank out fuse 11 and completely disable the telematics and onboard LTE without breaking anything else. Most other manufacturers seem to hide that stuff behind other systems.
Who givesa damn what is going on in Russia.
Well, for people that dont have RDS, there's this whole story about how losing a satellite signal can disable these cars, and perhaps we should do something about this before we are all locked down by an always online requirement.
 
Although I can’t force myself to feel sorry for Porsche owners wherever the are, all this signed me under the bill of “no car beyond 2010 manufacturing date for me”. I’d like to own what I buy.
 
Although I can’t force myself to feel sorry for Porsche owners wherever the are, all this signed me under the bill of “no car beyond 2010 manufacturing date for me”. I’d like to own what I buy.
I drive a 2003 Toyota Matrix. 93,000 + miles, and still works fine. Full synthetic oil & occasional coolant changes.
 
Although I can’t force myself to feel sorry for Porsche owners wherever the are, all this signed me under the bill of “no car beyond 2010 manufacturing date for me”. I’d like to own what I buy.
I drive a 2003 Toyota Matrix; 93,000+ miles (retired since then). Full synthetic oil since 10k; & occasional coolant changes. No eating in car.

Runs just fine.
 
Oh, eventually you know what will happen. With all these vehicles having 24/7 connections the following will happen.
1. Vehicle disabled if you miss a car payment
2. Traffic ticket mailed to you for speeding
3. Vehicle disabled if you forget to pay a ticket
4. Vehicle disabled if...(insert your own)
 
This is a perfect example of how security systems can become the weak point once everything relies on connectivity. The cars weren’t broken mechanically; they were fully functional machines locked out by a single failed satellite handshake. It’s wild how a multi-ton engineering marvel can get outsmarted by a bad signal.
 
Well that's Russia, it's perfectly normal nothing to work.
It's surprising that even Porches are affected though.
 
I'd rather drive a Porsche with issues than an old trash can
But these don't drive, that's the whole problem.

Unless you were just making a statement, in that case - go for it. Go buy yourself a Porsche with issues.
 
But these don't drive, that's the whole problem.

Unless you were just making a statement, in that case - go for it. Go buy yourself a Porsche with issues.

Blind loyalty or hate against Russia is making people not think straight it would seem.

Not being able to drive because the car can't connect to a satellite is a BIG no no for me.

Rather drive anything without ALL these useless TECH.

 
Forget luxury sports cars, imagine buying F35 jets only to have their readiness subject to the whims of Wyoming voters every 4 years.
A sobering thought. An avionics lock might not be as easy to bypass.
 
Maybe these cars were stolen somewhere and not bought officially.
P.S. Porsche is better than Lamborghini.
 
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