Thieves as you will see below seem to be stealing it signal of the key to open the doors and start the car, a Tesla Model S.
The English car owner just sat and watched the thieves take a Tesla Model S from his house, picking up the sign of his key that had it next to him.
Antony Kennedy from Essex, bought the used car for £ 45.000 (about 58.000 dollars), according with Business Insider. It was only nine months away from the parking lot of his home, with two security cameras to watch. But he did not seem to be able to keep the thieves away.
Kennedy contacted Tesla immediately but the company said there was nothing it could do. "The car is offline. I think they have removed the SIM, or blocked it ".
He called the police two hours later, at 4 on Sunday morning, and gave them the security camera, without any particular results.
The sufferer, advising other Tesla car owners, suggested keeping the key in a case F which blocks signals. It also mentions that the PIN feature should be enabled, as that's how one is required code access to start the car.
I think Tesla could do even more to have problem the thief, not the consumer.
A Tesla spokesperson told Business Insider: "We've issued several updates to protect our customers from theft, and last year we introduced an updated version which allows all our customers to completely disable passive input.”
"I have to admit it's my fault," Kennedy added. "I chose convenience over safety, and now I'm sorry. But in the end, it should be the thief who has the problem and not the victims. "
Watch the video
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