Court-mandated breathalyzers exist to keep dangerous drivers off roads, but a cyberattack has turned these safety devices into digital ankle braces. Since March 14, thousands of drivers across 46 states have found themselves trapped—not by law enforcement, but by failed servers that won’t let their cars start.
The Digital Leash Breaks Down
Server outages lock vehicles when required calibrations can’t connect to company systems.
Intoxalock’s ignition interlock devices require users to blow clean before starting their vehicles, then demand periodic recalibration every 30 to 120 days via company servers. When cybercriminals overloaded those servers, the whole system collapsed, creating widespread computer problems. Cars sit stranded at auto shops. Rural drivers have no transport options.
The company’s spokesperson Rachael Larson calls it a “precautionary pause,” but try explaining that to someone who can’t get to work.
Coast-to-Coast Tech Meltdown
From Maine to Minnesota, drivers discover their compliance device has become their captor.
The geographic scope reads like a bad Netflix thriller: 46 states affected, potentially 150,000 annual users impacted. Intoxalock offers band-aid solutions:
- 10-day calibration extensions at service centers (unless you’re in Arkansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, or Washington)
- Roadside assistance at 844-226-7522
- Towing reimbursement if you keep receipts
The devices still work for breath tests, but that’s like saying your smartphone works fine except for the calling part. For those facing extended vehicle downtime, some may need to consider basic car fixes while waiting for system restoration.
When Connected Cars Disconnect You
The attack exposes how IoT vulnerabilities can weaponize everyday safety technology.
This isn’t just another data breach story. It’s a preview of what happens when mission-critical consumer devices depend on cloud servers that cybercriminals can target. The company insists user data remains secure and won’t reveal if ransom demands were made, but security experts note that “organizations facing such service interruptions often experience significant reputational damage and potential regulatory scrutiny.”
The real damage isn’t reputational—it’s stranding people who’ve followed court orders to prove their sobriety, only to be punished by someone else’s cybersecurity failure. The ultimate irony? Technology designed to prevent impaired driving has created a different kind of transportation crisis, leaving responsible drivers as roadkill in someone else’s cyberwar.





























