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Uber Hires the Security Researchers Behind the Jeep Hack

Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek will join the company’s Advanced Technologies Center.

Spencer Platt / Getty Images News

Uber has hired two top vehicle security researchers, the company said on Friday, additions to its staff that come as the ride-hailing service ramps up its work on technology for self-driving cars.

Charlie Miller, who had been working at Twitter, and Chris Valasek, who worked at security firm IOActive, left their jobs on Friday and will join Uber next week.

Miller and Valasek won wide attention this month after demonstrating that they could hack into a moving Jeep.

Uber said that Miller and Valasek will join the company’s Advanced Technologies Center, a research laboratory Uber opened in Pittsburgh in February and staffed with dozens of autonomous vehicle experts hired away from Carnegie Mellon University.

An Uber spokeswoman said Miller and Valasek will work with the company’s top security officers “to continue building out a world-class safety and security program at Uber.”

Miller tweeted on Friday that he was looking forward to starting his new job with Uber. Valasek declined to comment.

As Uber plunges more deeply into developing or adapting self-driving cars, Miller and Valasek could help the company make that technology more secure.

Uber envisions autonomous cars that could someday replace its hundreds of thousands of contract drivers. The San Francisco company has gone to top-tier universities and research centers to build up this capability.

Uber on Tuesday announced a partnership with the University of Arizona, offering the school grant money to fund research into the mapping and safety technology needed for autonomous vehicles, which Uber will test on the streets of Tucson.

This partnership follows a more tumultuous effort earlier this year at Carnegie Mellon University that resulted in Uber hiring away more than 40 of its top scientists and researchers, leaving one of the world’s premier robotics research institutions reeling.

And in March, Uber bought digital mapping firm deCarta, a San Jose, Calif.-based company whose technology offers search and turn-by-turn directions.

Miller and Valasek’s Jeep efforts, which were coordinated with manufacturer Fiat Chrysler, prompted the first vehicle recall to protect drivers from possible malicious hacking.

Fiat Chrysler recalled 1.4 million vehicles to install software intended to prevent hackers from emulating the experiment, which used the cellular network to enter the entertainment system and then win control of the engine, brakes and steering.

(Reporting by Joseph Menn and Heather Somerville; Additional reporting by Jim Finkle; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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