On Thu, 19 Jun 2003, Thomas Shaddack wrote:
Works very nicely. :)
Problem: leaves evidence, and takes time. The main advantage of electric shock is that the fried chip looks for the naked eye exactly the same way as a non-fried chip. The only difference could be found with a scanning electron microscope on the chip itself, which is something nobody is likely to bother with. Especially in harsh environments (cars classify) chips tend to die, so its death could look as natural enough to not be suspicious.
If I am wrong, please tell me where and why. :)
Automotive environments are known to be harsh, so electronics is protected to some extent. The assumption is that spark plug voltages can get into sensors, so most data lines are protected as are the sensor lines. If you try to fry things with double the voltage of a standard spark plug it may not work, if you use 10 times that it will, but the ESD protection will obviously be blown too. That begins to look suspicious (but I doubt anyone could _prove_ you fried it on purpose). The main question is how deep is the memory of these things. If they only remember the last catastrophic event then "privacy" isn't a problem. The actual routes taken are not stored. If you are in an accident and the cops ask you to take a breath test, you can take the test or not - and deal with the consequences of the legal system based on your choice. The data taken from the recorder for the "event" is then corroboration, which may help instead of hurt you. If the box remembers everything you do, and the garage mechanic can use it to blackmail you, then it becomes a "privacy" issue. I think the issue is when data is removed, and how much is actually stored. Can anybody explain the details? Patience, persistence, truth, Dr. mike