[en] Tire Pressure Monitoring System (TPMS) transmissions of modern cars are sent over the air in clear text and entail a unique identifier that does not change over very
long periods of time. In this work, we investigate the privacy implications for car owners of this design choice by collecting and analyzing TPMS transmissions from a network of low-cost spectrum receivers that we deploy along the road over a
period of 10 weeks. Our measurement study comprises data from 12 verified cars, but malicious actors could easily scale their efforts to track several thousands of cars, given that we observed at least 20k cars during our measurements. Our results
show that TPMS transmissions can be used to systematically infer potentially sensitive information such as the presence, type, weight, or driving pattern of the driver. The affordability of the equipment to cause these threats, as low as $100 per receiver,
urges policymakers and car manufacturers to design a more secure and privacy-preserving TPMS for future cars.
Disciplines :
Electrical & electronics engineering
Author, co-author :
Lizarribar, Yago; armasuisse
Scalingi, Alessio; Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Giustiniano, Domenico; IMDEA Networks
Sanchez Sanchez, Pedro Miguel; University of Murcia
Calvo-Palomino, Roberto; Universidad Rey Juan Carlos
Bovet, Gérôme; armasuisse
LENDERS, Vincent ; University of Luxembourg > Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SNT) > Systems and Network Security Group (SNS)
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
Can’t Hide Your Stride: Inferring Car Movement Patterns from Passive TPMS Measurements
Publication date :
March 2026
Event name :
IFIP/IEEE Wireless On-demand Network Systems and Services Conference (WONS)
Event date :
2-4 March 2026
Audience :
International
Main work title :
Can’t Hide Your Stride: Inferring Car Movement Patterns from Passive TPMS Measurements