Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Chinese-produced Yutong electric buses operate for the transport agency Movia in Copenhagen. (Francis Joseph Dean / Alamy file) ...
Europe’s public transport infrastructure has a fundamental security flaw: the Chinese company that built the bus can decide to stop it. Hundreds of electric buses operating in the UK, Denmark, and ...
Imagine waiting at a bus stop, checking your watch, and thinking: is the vehicle late, or did someone in another country hit the “off” switch? Welcome to the new era of public transport paranoia, ...
An electric bus operated by Movia in Copenhagen, Denmark. Nearly 70 percent of the city’s buses are made by Chinese companies. Yet these security and dependency concerns have so far done little to ...
This month, Skywell New Energy Vehicles, operating under the Skyworth Auto banner and part of Kaiwo Group, handed over 249 shiny new hydrogen fuel cell buses to ...
Across Europe and beyond, engineers keep opening the digital guts of imported Chinese buses and finding the same unnerving feature: a hidden way to shut vehicles down from afar. What began as a quiet ...
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