Last_ICE
Member
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2024
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 32
- Reaction score
- 18
- Location
- SF Bay Area
- Car(s)
- 2024 Integra Type S
- Thread starter
- #1
I live in a port city where cars get broken into and boosted a lot. Have a locked home garage for overnight storage, but park in the city during the day in areas where thefts/boosting happen.
Got my ITS a couple of weeks ago and live in a bit of fear of involuntarily waving goodbye to it. In the interim, I have added Advanced Wheel Locks, a passel of de-speakered AirTags, a Club, and fob faraday case.
I have been reading about OBD and CAN injection attacks online, but am not smart enough to know how seriously to take them, and what to actually do in response.
If it's worth getting an OBD blocker, as far as I can tell the Canadian Sherlock OBD Protector isn't sold in the States, and the German OBD Saver doesn't come in a Honda/Acura specific version, so the remaining option is their Universal Plus product, which looks bulky af. The other OBD blockers I see online all seem to be either 3D printed plastic secured with generally available security-screw heads, or the Bem Auto blocker, which an Amazon review claims can be popped off with a screwdriver through the open window on it side.
Otherwise, I don't know anything about kill switches or rerouted OBD ports. Would love any advice y'all are willing to share. I don't mind paying a pro to do the work; I just don't know what to get done.
Got my ITS a couple of weeks ago and live in a bit of fear of involuntarily waving goodbye to it. In the interim, I have added Advanced Wheel Locks, a passel of de-speakered AirTags, a Club, and fob faraday case.
I have been reading about OBD and CAN injection attacks online, but am not smart enough to know how seriously to take them, and what to actually do in response.
If it's worth getting an OBD blocker, as far as I can tell the Canadian Sherlock OBD Protector isn't sold in the States, and the German OBD Saver doesn't come in a Honda/Acura specific version, so the remaining option is their Universal Plus product, which looks bulky af. The other OBD blockers I see online all seem to be either 3D printed plastic secured with generally available security-screw heads, or the Bem Auto blocker, which an Amazon review claims can be popped off with a screwdriver through the open window on it side.
Otherwise, I don't know anything about kill switches or rerouted OBD ports. Would love any advice y'all are willing to share. I don't mind paying a pro to do the work; I just don't know what to get done.
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