Chinese cars: are they a security threat?
- Written by: The Times

Chinese-made vehicles are arriving in Australia in enormous numbers. Brands once largely unknown to Australian motorists are now competing directly with Japanese, Korean, European and American manufacturers on price, technology and increasingly, quality.
For many Australians, the attraction is obvious. Modern styling. Large touchscreens. Long warranty periods. Competitive pricing. Advanced electric vehicle technology. In some cases, Chinese manufacturers are moving faster than traditional carmakers in adapting to the electric era.
Yet alongside the rise of Chinese vehicles has come another debate entirely — data, surveillance and national security.
The modern car is no longer simply a mechanical machine. It is a rolling computer connected to the internet, constantly collecting information about its driver, passengers and surroundings. The Chinese government may have access to customer data.
That reality has raised questions globally about what information modern vehicles gather, where that information goes and who may ultimately have access to it.
Modern cars collect vast amounts of data
Most new vehicles — regardless of country of origin — now collect data through onboard sensors, cameras, microphones, GPS systems and connected software.
Depending on the model and features enabled, a vehicle may collect:
- GPS location and travel history
- Driving behaviour and speed
- Voice commands and audio recordings
- Phone contacts and messages synced through Bluetooth
- Vehicle diagnostics and maintenance data
- Camera footage from inside and outside the vehicle
- Charging behaviour for electric vehicles
- App usage and connected device information
Manufacturers say much of this data is used for legitimate purposes including safety systems, navigation, software updates, theft prevention and improving vehicle performance.
However, cybersecurity experts warn that consumers often do not fully understand how much information modern connected vehicles gather.
The concern is not only about China
Security analysts point out that concerns over vehicle data are not limited to Chinese manufacturers alone.
American, European, Korean and Japanese vehicles also gather extensive user data.
The difference is geopolitical.
China’s national security laws have prompted concern among western governments because Chinese companies may be compelled to provide information to state authorities if requested.
That has fuelled fears that data collected by Chinese-made connected vehicles could potentially be accessed by agencies linked to the Chinese state or military.
Whether such access is occurring in practice is difficult for ordinary consumers to independently verify.
But the concern itself is real enough that governments around the world are now actively reviewing connected vehicle security.
Governments are paying attention
The United States has already announced investigations into connected vehicle technologies from China and has raised concerns about foreign access to sensitive infrastructure and personal movement data.
Officials fear that vehicles connected to cloud-based systems could theoretically allow large-scale data collection on citizens, infrastructure and government personnel.
The concern becomes more serious when the driver is someone in a sensitive role.
Military personnel. Police officers. Intelligence staff. Government ministers. Defence contractors. Executives handling critical infrastructure. Senior corporate figures.
If a connected vehicle continuously records locations, routines, destinations and communications, security experts argue that such information could potentially be valuable to foreign intelligence services.
In theory, repeated travel patterns could reveal:
- Home addresses
- Workplace locations
- Meeting habits
- Defence facility visits
- Social connections
- Business activities
- Daily routines
Even if no wrongdoing occurs, intelligence agencies globally have always valued data collection.
As military strategists have long understood, information itself is power.
Rumour or fact?
This is where the debate becomes difficult.
There is currently little publicly available evidence showing ordinary Australians are being actively monitored through Chinese vehicles.
Many claims circulating online remain speculative, exaggerated or unsupported.
At the same time, it is also true that modern connected cars possess technological capabilities that barely existed a decade ago.
The capacity for data collection is unquestionably real.
The unanswered question is how that data is ultimately used, stored and protected.
That uncertainty alone is enough to concern some governments and security professionals.
Convenience versus privacy
Australians increasingly accept surveillance trade-offs in daily life.
Smartphones track locations. Smart televisions gather viewing habits. Social media platforms collect behavioural data. Apps monitor movement, purchases and communication patterns.
Connected vehicles may simply represent the next stage of that technological shift.
The issue for consumers becomes one of awareness and risk management.
Drivers should carefully review:
- Vehicle privacy policies
- App permissions
- Cloud-connected features
- Microphone and camera settings
- Data sharing permissions
- Remote access capabilities
Many consumers never read the privacy agreements attached to modern vehicles.
That may become increasingly unwise.
Cheap does not necessarily mean unsafe
It is also important not to confuse price with capability.
Some Chinese manufacturers now produce technologically advanced vehicles that rival established global brands.
Many are backed by enormous industrial capacity, advanced battery technology and sophisticated software development.
China is no longer merely producing “cheap imports”. In electric vehicles especially, it is becoming a dominant global force.
That commercial success is real.
But so too are the strategic questions surrounding data security and foreign technology dependence.
Take care — but avoid hysteria
The debate over Chinese vehicles should not descend into paranoia or xenophobia.
Modern data collection is now a global issue, not solely a Chinese one.
Still, Australians should understand that a modern connected vehicle can know a remarkable amount about its owner.
Where they travel.
Who they call.
Where they charge.
Where they work.
How they drive.
Potentially even what they say.
Whether that information is harmless convenience data or something more sensitive depends on how it is handled and who can access it.
For ordinary motorists, the practical response is neither panic nor blind trust.
It is caution.
Understand what technology you are buying.
Know what permissions you are granting.
And remember that in the connected era, a car may know far more about its owner than many people realise.






















