Friday, 3 July 2026 MUMBAI EDITION LIVE

Chinese App Enables Remote E-Rickshaw Shutdown; Drivers Left Vulnerable

Investigation reveals security risk as Chinese app remotely disables e-rickshaws, leaving drivers stranded mid-journey.

Hindustan Times·Fri, 03 July 2026 at 10:30 am
Chinese App Enables Remote E-Rickshaw Shutdown; Drivers Left Vulnerable

A significant cybersecurity vulnerability has emerged in India's e-rickshaw ecosystem, with a Chinese-origin application capable of remotely shutting down vehicles through smartphone commands. Hindustan Times conducted an investigation with a willing driver, demonstrating how the app successfully disabled an operating e-rickshaw and prevented it from restarting without authorization through the same application.

The test revealed alarming control mechanisms embedded in the technology. Once the remote shutdown command is executed, drivers lose all ability to operate their vehicles independently, creating potential safety hazards on busy Mumbai and Indian roads. The application reportedly maintains backend control over multiple e-rickshaws simultaneously, raising concerns about coordinated disruptions affecting entire fleets.

This discovery highlights growing concerns about foreign technological dependencies in India's transport infrastructure. The e-rickshaw sector, which provides livelihood to thousands of informal workers across Indian cities, increasingly relies on digital platforms for vehicle management, payment processing, and operational oversight. Such remote-access capabilities pose risks not only to individual drivers but to urban mobility systems as a whole.

The implications extend beyond individual inconvenience. Mass shutdown incidents could paralyze last-mile connectivity in cities, disrupting commuting patterns and affecting vulnerable populations reliant on affordable transport. Authorities face mounting pressure to regulate app-based vehicle management systems and mandate security standards for technologies controlling critical transport assets.

Transport officials and cybersecurity experts are now scrutinizing app permissions and backend infrastructure across the sector. The incident underscores the need for domestic alternatives and stronger data protection regulations governing vehicle control systems. Drivers and operators are urged to exercise caution when installing third-party applications with broad device access permissions.

Read the original report ↗

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