Why Partner With VicOne?
VicOne’s Strategic Partnership Program provides automotive stakeholders with essential support and technical know-how in implementing cybersecurity for connected vehicles. Through this program, car manufacturers (OEMs), system suppliers, and other stakeholders can shape the future of the industry by designing and deploying vehicles that are safe, secure, and fully compliant with standards and regulations.
Comprehensive Vehicle Protection
VicOne’s cybersecurity solutions protect not only a vehicle’s critical components but also the manufacturing processes and supply chain systems supporting these. Consequently, stakeholders are armed with end-to-end protection from vulnerabilities and can take a more aggressive stance against cyberthreats.
A Future-Oriented Compliance Strategy
VicOne assists its partners in executing a strategy that allows them to meet rigorous regulatory requirements with more confidence and ease. This helps them avoid development delays, optimize workflows, and ultimately improve time to market.
Commitment to the Long Haul
VicOne fully commits to its partners throughout the program’s duration — from engagement to implementation. In each phase, VicOne’s technical experts and consultants provide valuable insights that let partners make the right business decisions at the right time.
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Gain Insights Into Automotive Cybersecurity
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BlogJanuary 22, 2026Pwn2Own Automotive 2026 Day 1 opened with record-breaking momentum, with researchers successfully compromising infotainment systems, EV chargers, and Tesla interfaces—highlighting how expansive today’s automotive attack surface has become. The surge in entries and chained exploits confirms a clear shift: in the SDV era, automotive cyber risk is no longer isolated to the vehicle, but systemic across the entire ecosystem. - Read More
BlogJanuary 22, 2026Day 2 delivered 29 new zero-days, pushing the total to a record 66. Researchers repeatedly compromised Level 2/3 EV chargers and IVI systems using practical flaws like exposed interfaces and command injection. The takeaway: automotive and charging infrastructure attacks are now repeatable at scale—shifting cyber risk from theoretical to immediate operational impact. - Read More
BlogJanuary 15, 2026Pwn2Own Automotive 2026 exposes critical zero-day vulnerabilities in software-defined vehicles before they escalate into real-world business and operational risk. By ensuring zero-day vulnerabilities move from exposure to resolution, the event transforms discovery into Automotive Foresight—helping organizations stay ahead of risk before it reaches the road.