An Overview of Attacks and Defences on Intelligent Connected Vehicles
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 20:31 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Intelligent connected vehicles face attacks on ECUs, CAN bus, and V2X links, with defenses grouped into cryptography, network security, software vulnerability detection, and malware detection.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
After outlining the vehicle architecture, this review identifies a few major security attacks on intelligent connected vehicles and surveys defenses against them, classifying the defenses into cryptography, network security, software vulnerability detection, and malware detection while exploring future prevention directions.
What carries the argument
The four-category classification of defenses (cryptography, network security, software vulnerability detection, and malware detection) that structures the survey of protections for Electronic Control Units, the CAN bus, and V2X communications.
If this is right
- Security efforts can target specific components like the CAN bus using the matching defense category.
- The classification supports building layered protections that combine multiple categories for V2X systems.
- Gaps identified in current defenses highlight where software and malware tools need more development.
- Future work on 5G-based communications can build directly on the surveyed cryptography and network approaches.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same four-category lens might apply to other connected systems such as industrial IoT devices to test its broader usefulness.
- Vehicle manufacturers could use the attack list to run targeted penetration tests on their specific models.
- Over time the categories may need expansion if new attack vectors emerge from advances in autonomous driving software.
Load-bearing premise
The selected attacks and the four defense categories together cover the main threats and solutions without leaving out important ones.
What would settle it
Discovery of a significant attack type on intelligent connected vehicles or a defense method that fits none of the four listed categories would show the survey's classification is incomplete.
Figures
read the original abstract
Cyber security is one of the most significant challenges in connected vehicular systems and connected vehicles are prone to different cybersecurity attacks that endanger passengers' safety. Cyber security in intelligent connected vehicles is composed of in-vehicle security and security of inter-vehicle communications. Security of Electronic Control Units (ECUs) and the Control Area Network (CAN) bus are the most significant parts of in-vehicle security. Besides, with the development of 4G LTE and 5G remote communication technologies for vehicle-toeverything (V2X) communications, the security of inter-vehicle communications is another potential problem. After giving a short introduction to the architecture of next-generation vehicles including driverless and intelligent vehicles, this review paper identifies a few major security attacks on the intelligent connected vehicles. Based on these attacks, we provide a comprehensive survey of available defences against these attacks and classify them into four categories, i.e. cryptography, network security, software vulnerability detection, and malware detection. We also explore the future directions for preventing attacks on intelligent vehicle systems.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper is a survey on cybersecurity for intelligent connected vehicles. It begins with an overview of next-generation vehicle architecture (including driverless and intelligent vehicles), identifies several major attacks on in-vehicle systems (ECUs and CAN bus) and inter-vehicle communications (V2X over 4G/5G), surveys available defenses, and organizes those defenses into four categories (cryptography, network security, software vulnerability detection, and malware detection). It concludes by discussing future research directions.
Significance. If the literature coverage is representative and the four-category taxonomy is applied consistently, the survey could serve as a useful entry point for researchers entering the vehicular cybersecurity area, particularly given the growth of V2X and autonomous systems. No machine-checked proofs, reproducible artifacts, or falsifiable predictions are present, as expected for a descriptive survey.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the phrase 'vehicle-toeverything' is missing a hyphen or space before '(V2X)'.
- [Abstract] The abstract states that the paper 'identifies a few major security attacks' yet also claims to deliver a 'comprehensive survey' of defenses; the full text should clarify the selection criteria for the attacks and the scope of the literature reviewed to support the comprehensiveness claim.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their review and recommendation of minor revision. The provided summary accurately reflects the scope and structure of our survey on cybersecurity attacks and defenses for intelligent connected vehicles. No specific major comments were listed in the report.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; survey of external literature
full rationale
This is a review paper whose central claim is a descriptive survey of selected attacks on intelligent connected vehicles and an organizing classification of existing defenses into four categories drawn from prior work. No derivations, equations, predictions, fitted parameters, or self-citation chains appear in the text. The classification is explicitly presented as one possible lens rather than a provably exhaustive result derived from the paper's own content. The paper is self-contained as a literature overview against external benchmarks and receives the default non-circularity finding.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
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