TRAVERSE CITY, MI – The Center for Automotive Research’s annual Management Briefing Seminars here is stacked with presentations from the auto industry about the future of software-defined vehicles (SDVs). And with that technological transformation away from internal-combustion vehicles comes concerns and speedbumps regarding cybersecurity.
Biden Admin. official Harry Kresja, Office of the National Cyber Director, The White House, Assistant National Cyber Director for Strategy and Research, tells MBS attendees that current efforts to regulate and partner with the auto industry, as well as others, are driven by both concern about threats to cybersecurity and ambition about what these technological advancements can bring to improve the lives and mobility of citizens.
Kresja speaks to the investments in EVs, software and cybersecurity that have come out of the Administration and Congress including the Inflation Reduction Act, the Chips and Science Act of 2022 and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act. But his presence at MBS, says Kresja, is to listen and network about what has been harder than expected, and what has been easy (about this transformation) and when government has been a supportive partner and when we have been less than that.
In expressing concern about relatively small security breaches that have led to massive impacts on industries and consumers, like the recent ransomware cyberattack on dealership software supplier CDK that stopped sales operations at dealerships across the country, Kresja says. Our digital ecosystem is more brittle than it needs to be.