Audit Phase: V-DIG
Audit Date: 2026-05-01
Entity Scope: Hyundai Motor Company, Kia Corporation, Hyundai Mobis, and directly controlled subsidiaries (collectively “Hyundai Motor Group”)
Evidence Basis & Methodological Note: This audit is based exclusively on the research memos dated 2026-05-01 (initial) and 2026-05-01 (expansion run). All factual claims are drawn from named public disclosures — corporate announcements, regulatory filings, credible press reports, or NGO publications — as documented therein. Fourteen material evidence gaps are logged (five resolved or partially resolved; nine carried forward or newly identified). No new research has been conducted beyond those memos. No facts, relationships, contracts, or incidents have been invented or inferred from industry norms, national origin, or alumni networks alone. Live web verification against current filings, procurement records, and activist campaign databases was not completed during memo preparation and constitutes a standing caveat throughout this report. Korean-language source sweep (DART, business press) remains outstanding.
Hyundai Motor Group entered a documented partnership with Upstream Security (Israel, founded 2017) c. 2020.17 Upstream’s platform provides cloud-based, machine-learning-driven anomaly detection and cyber threat monitoring across OEM vehicle fleets by analysing vehicle telemetry at scale. Hyundai was named as a customer and partner in Upstream’s 2021 funding materials, which described the relationship as integration into connected-car security infrastructure — not a peripheral or experimental deployment — covering Hyundai’s BlueLink and Hyundai Connected services.1718
Post-acquisition status: Upstream Security was acquired by Mobileye (Intel subsidiary, Israeli-headquartered, NASDAQ: MBLY) in April 2022.31 Post-acquisition, Upstream’s connected-vehicle cybersecurity platform became a Mobileye product line. The ongoing operational status of the Upstream-derived service under Mobileye has not been separately confirmed in named public disclosures post-acquisition; however, the acquisition consolidates rather than severs the Israeli-origin technology nexus, given that Hyundai is already a confirmed Mobileye ADAS chip customer across its vehicle fleet (see below).3137 (Partnership: 2020; acquisition by Mobileye: April 2022; post-acquisition service status: unconfirmed in named disclosures — Evidence Gap 4, partially clarified)
Mobileye — enterprise-scale ADAS dependency: Mobileye’s EyeQ vision processors are integrated into Hyundai and Kia production vehicles as part of the standard ADAS stack (lane-keeping, automatic emergency braking, forward collision warning). Mobileye’s 2023 Form 20-F annual report (SEC filing) and third-party automotive press confirm Hyundai Motor Group as a named OEM customer.5258 The 2019 expanded autonomous vehicle (AV) partnership announcement2 and the Upstream Security acquisition31 mean Mobileye is now present at three distinct layers of Hyundai’s technology stack: (1) ADAS hardware (EyeQ chips, fleet-wide); (2) connected-vehicle cybersecurity (post-Upstream acquisition); and (3) the earlier expanded AV collaboration agreement. This constitutes the single deepest and broadest Israeli-origin technology dependency identified in this audit.231375258 (2019–present; ongoing; production fleet-level)
No public evidence was identified of named licensing, subscription, or integration agreements between Hyundai Motor Group and any of the following Israeli-origin enterprise security vendors at the corporate IT level: Check Point Software (including Argus Cyber Security), CyberArk, SentinelOne, Wiz, Claroty, Verint Systems, NICE Ltd., or Palo Alto Networks. Source classes checked included trade press, DART regulatory filings, and corporate sustainability reports.12728 No new evidence was identified in the expansion run. Finding stands: No public evidence identified.
No public evidence was identified of Israeli-origin call-centre analytics, workforce management, or enterprise analytics platform deployments at Hyundai Motor Group.
No public evidence was identified of a systems integrator engagement (e.g., Accenture, Wipro, Infosys) that mandated or deployed Israeli-origin software as part of a named Hyundai digital transformation programme.
The Upstream Security / Mobileye connected-vehicle cybersecurity relationship, combined with Mobileye’s fleet-wide EyeQ ADAS chip integration, means the Israeli-origin technology dependency at this layer is materially deeper than the single-vendor characterisation in the prior audit. The precise deployment scale (number of vehicles enrolled, geographic coverage of the cybersecurity service) has not been publicly disclosed.17183152
Cipia (formerly Eyesight Technologies, Israel) and Hyundai Mobis entered a collaboration for driver monitoring systems (DMS) and occupant monitoring systems (OMS), reported c. 2021.1314 Cipia’s computer vision platform uses camera-based algorithms to detect driver drowsiness, distraction, and occupant classification inside vehicles. The stated application context is automotive safety (regulatory compliance with Euro NCAP DMS requirements and equivalent standards) rather than law enforcement, retail analytics, or public-space surveillance. Hyundai Mobis is the Group’s Tier-1 components arm and is the entity through which this technology would be integrated into Hyundai and Kia production vehicles.1314 Cipia’s 2023–2024 corporate website continues to list Hyundai Mobis as a customer and partner.49 The specific Hyundai and Kia vehicle models integrating Cipia DMS and the production volumes have not been confirmed in Hyundai or Kia’s own product disclosures reviewed to date (Evidence Gap 13). (2021–present; production integration ongoing per Cipia’s own disclosures)
Vayyar Imaging (Israel), a 4D imaging radar company, was selected by Hyundai Mobis as a supplier for in-cabin occupant detection radar systems, announced 2021.1112 Vayyar’s radar-based sensing technology detects the presence, number, and position of vehicle occupants without camera-based image capture, addressing child presence detection requirements. This is an automotive safety function; no public evidence was identified of Vayyar technology deployed for non-automotive surveillance purposes by Hyundai.1112 Vayyar completed a $108M Series D in September 2021, indicating continued commercial activity.50 Hyundai Mobis’s 2023 annual report references in-cabin radar sensor integration consistent with Vayyar’s product domain, though Vayyar is not named by brand in that filing.51 (2021–present; supply relationship ongoing status: probable but not separately reconfirmed by name in post-2022 public Mobis disclosures — Evidence Gap 8)
No public evidence was identified of deployments by Hyundai Motor Group of facial recognition or biometric surveillance platforms from Israeli vendors — including AnyVision/Oosto, Trigo, BriefCam, or Trax — in retail, manufacturing, corporate facilities, or any other operational context. No new evidence was identified in the expansion run. Finding stands: No public evidence identified.
No public evidence was identified of Israeli-origin predictive analytics, sentiment analysis, social media monitoring, or workforce surveillance tools deployed by Hyundai Motor Group.
No public evidence was identified of Israeli-origin surveillance technology reaching Hyundai indirectly through managed security services or bundled enterprise suites. Source classes checked included NGO databases (Who Profits,45 BDS Movement[^27b]), trade press, and corporate disclosures.
No public evidence was identified of Hyundai Motor Group operating, leasing, or co-locating data centre or cloud infrastructure within Israel. This finding is consistent across corporate annual reports, sustainability reports, and trade press reviewed in the underlying memos.1272843
No public evidence was identified of Hyundai Motor Group’s participation in Israel’s Project Nimbus sovereign cloud programme or any equivalent Israeli government cloud procurement. Hyundai Motor Group is an automotive OEM; such participation is not consistent with its disclosed business activities or sector profile.
Otonomo (Israel) operated a connected-car data marketplace that aggregated vehicle telemetry from multiple OEMs. Hyundai Motor Group joined the Otonomo platform as a data provider/partner c. 2019, as disclosed in Otonomo’s own press materials.19 This relationship introduced a third-party Israeli intermediary into Hyundai’s vehicle telemetry data flows for the period of that agreement, given that Otonomo operated as an Israeli-registered company with Israeli data infrastructure. Otonomo merged with US-based roadside assistance platform Urgently in July 2022.42 Post-merger, the combined entity operates under the Urgently brand and has pivoted away from the OEM vehicle data marketplace model. Available sources do not confirm that Hyundai’s vehicle telemetry data-sharing arrangement survived the merger or was continued under Urgently’s commercial model. Evidence Gap 9 from the prior memo is resolved: the Otonomo platform as originally constituted no longer operates; the data-sharing relationship is likely discontinued but formal termination has not been confirmed in named disclosures. (2019–2022 confirmed as Israeli-jurisdiction data relationship; post-July 2022: likely discontinued, unconfirmed)
Hyundai’s BlueLink (Hyundai) and UVO (Kia) connected-car platforms collect vehicle telemetry, location data, driver behaviour data, and in some markets owner identity and payment data. The platform’s backend infrastructure is managed through Hyundai’s own data centres, primarily in Korea and regional hubs in Europe and North America, per corporate disclosures. No evidence was identified of Israeli-jurisdiction data routing or storage in Hyundai’s primary connected-car infrastructure.12743
The 2019 expanded AV partnership between Hyundai and Mobileye2 covered collaborative development of Level 4 autonomous driving systems using Mobileye’s Road Experience Management (REM) mapping platform, which crowdsources HD map data from participating vehicles’ cameras. This means Hyundai and Kia vehicles equipped with Mobileye ADAS chips are, under the REM programme, contributors to Mobileye’s global HD map dataset — constituting a data-flow from Hyundai’s vehicle fleet into Mobileye’s Israeli-headquartered platform. Mobileye is incorporated in Israel and subject to Israeli law, including Israel’s Defence Export Control Law and data access frameworks. The geographic and volumetric scope of REM data collection from Hyundai/Kia vehicles and the data architecture governing that collection have not been publicly disclosed at the level required to fully assess the data-exposure dimension (Evidence Gap 11).3752
The Upstream Security / Mobileye integration processes vehicle telemetry for anomaly detection. Post-Upstream acquisition by Mobileye (April 2022), telemetry data processed through this platform would be subject to Mobileye’s data infrastructure and legal jurisdiction. The precise data-routing architecture and contractual data-residency terms of the Upstream/Mobileye service have not been publicly disclosed. This represents a live data-exposure consideration.3137
No public evidence was identified of Hyundai Motor Group procuring data sovereignty, data residency management, or cloud resilience services from Israeli vendors.
No public evidence was identified of any contract, partnership, or service agreement between Hyundai Motor Group and the Israeli Ministry of Defence, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), or Israeli intelligence agencies (Mossad, Shin Bet, Aman). Source classes checked included publicly accessible Israeli defence procurement records, NGO reports, Korean DART regulatory filings, and trade press.45[^27b]28
No public evidence was identified of Hyundai Motor Group’s commercial technologies — including its connected-vehicle platforms, in-cabin sensing systems, or autonomous vehicle development assets — being publicly reported or confirmed as deployed for Israeli military, intelligence, or law enforcement surveillance functions in Israel or occupied territories. Source classes checked included the Who Profits database, academic reports, and investigative journalism archives.45
Hyundai Motor Group acquired a controlling stake in Boston Dynamics (US) from SoftBank in December 2020.[^32b] Boston Dynamics’s mobile robotics platforms (Spot, Atlas) have attracted general public and civil society scrutiny regarding potential military and law enforcement applications globally (documented in US press in relation to various domestic law enforcement deployments). No verified contract or deployment of Boston Dynamics platforms with Israeli military or security forces has been identified in the public sources available to this audit through April 2026. The concern is noted but remains unsubstantiated at the Israeli-nexus level within the scope of this audit.
No public evidence was identified. Hyundai Motor Group does not operate in the cybersecurity product sector as a developer or vendor of offensive cyber tools.
Hyundai Motor Group has maintained multiple Israeli-origin technology relationships directly within its autonomous vehicle (AV) development programme:
Mobileye (Intel, Israel, NASDAQ: MBLY): A Hyundai–Mobileye autonomous driving partnership was reported in January 2019.2 Mobileye is the dominant provider of ADAS vision processors and its EyeQ chips are integrated across Hyundai and Kia model lines at fleet scale, confirmed in Mobileye’s own SEC filings and third-party automotive press.375258 The 2019 expanded partnership specifically addressed collaborative development of Level 4 autonomous driving systems using Mobileye’s REM mapping platform. This represents a high-significance, fleet-wide dependency spanning ADAS hardware, AV development, connected-vehicle cybersecurity (post-Upstream acquisition), and crowdsourced HD mapping data flows.231375258
Innoviz Technologies (Israel, LiDAR, NASDAQ: INVZ): Hyundai Motor Group, through its venture arm and via Hyundai Mobis, invested in Innoviz c. 2019.3 Hyundai Mobis subsequently entered a supply partnership for Innoviz’s solid-state LiDAR sensors for series production vehicles.424 Innoviz went public via SPAC on NASDAQ in 2021. Innoviz disclosed going-concern warnings in its 2022 and 2023 SEC filings3233 and undertook significant restructuring in 2023, including workforce reductions. Innoviz’s primary announced production customer as of 2023 was BMW (Series 7 LiDAR), not Hyundai.59 The Hyundai Mobis production supply partnership announced 2020–2021 has not been reconfirmed in Innoviz’s post-2022 investor communications or in Hyundai Mobis’s own ADAS supply chain disclosures in available sources. Evidence Gap 3 remains open: the production supply relationship may have been delayed, reduced in scope, or superseded by Innoviz’s BMW-focused restructuring.323359 (Investment: 2019 confirmed; supply partnership announced 2020–2021; current production supply status: unconfirmed, possibly inactive)
Cognata (Israel, AV simulation): Hyundai Mobis acquired a stake in Cognata, an Israeli AV simulation and synthetic data generation platform, c. 2019–2020.1516 Cognata’s software generates simulated driving scenarios for AV model training and validation. Cognata was acquired by Foretellix (also an Israeli AV simulation company) in 2022,41 resolving Evidence Gap 5. The Cognata entity as an independent company no longer exists. No public disclosure of Hyundai Mobis receiving Foretellix equity or entering a continuing technology relationship with Foretellix has been identified. The Cognata relationship is treated as concluded. (Investment/stake: 2019–2020; entity acquired/merged into Foretellix: 2022; relationship: concluded)
Hyundai Motor Group also participates in Aurora Innovation (US), an autonomous trucking platform, with a partnership announced 2021.[^22b] This is documented for completeness and has no Israeli-nexus.
No public evidence was identified of Hyundai Motor Group providing AI, ML, computer vision, or autonomous decision-support systems to Israeli state, military, or security bodies. Source classes checked included Israeli government procurement notices, corporate press releases, and NGO databases.
No public evidence was identified of Hyundai AI or AV models being trained on civilian population data, intercepted communications, or surveillance-derived datasets from Israel or occupied territories.
Hyundai Motor Group established a CRADLE Tel Aviv open innovation outpost in 2019.56 CRADLE (Center for Robotic-Augmented Design in Living Experiences) is Hyundai’s global open innovation network, with nodes also in Berlin, Singapore, Silicon Valley, and Beijing.29 The Tel Aviv node was explicitly positioned to access the Israeli autonomous vehicle, mobility, and deep-tech startup ecosystem.2029
CRADLE Tel Aviv served as the institutional mechanism through which a significant portion of Hyundai’s Israeli startup portfolio (detailed below) was identified and cultivated. Its establishment therefore has programmatic significance beyond individual investment relationships. No corporate press release, Globes article, or social media disclosure confirming active CRADLE Tel Aviv operations post-October 2023 has been identified in available sources.38 Evidence Gap 2 remains open. (Established: 2019; status post-October 2023: unconfirmed)
The following Israeli-origin investments and commercial partnerships have been identified and verified through named public disclosures:
Euisun Chung (Executive Chair, Hyundai Motor Group): Euisun Chung is the Executive Chair of Hyundai Motor Company and the controlling family principal of Hyundai Motor Group, holding direct and indirect equity through the Chung family holding structure.3444 No public evidence was identified of Euisun Chung holding personal or family-office equity investments in Israeli surveillance, cyber, AI, SIGINT, or military-technology firms (Unit 8200 / Talpiot alumni firms, NSO Group, Cellebrite, AnyVision/Oosto, Wiz, Palantir, Check Point, SentinelOne, Verint, NICE, or comparable entities). Source classes checked: KRX major shareholder disclosures,35 KFTC affiliated persons disclosures,56 Korean business press,36 and English-language corporate governance databases. No public evidence identified.
Jaehoon Chang (President & CEO, Hyundai Motor Company) and Ho-Sung Song (President & CEO, Kia Corporation): No public evidence was identified of personal investments by either executive in Israeli technology firms of the relevant category.44 No public evidence identified.
Chung family holding structure: The Hyundai Motor Group is controlled through a complex cross-shareholding structure anchored by Hyundai Mobis, Hyundai Motor, and Kia Corporation, with the Chung family holding influence through direct and indirect shareholdings.3656 No evidence was identified of family-office vehicles holding stakes in Israeli technology companies. No public evidence identified.
Hyundai Motor Group venture / corporate investment vehicles: Hyundai’s corporate venture investments in Israeli startups were made through Hyundai’s corporate venture structure (Hyundai CRADLE, Hyundai Motor Group’s strategic investment function, or Hyundai Mobis directly) — not through identifiable personal principal investment vehicles.3471113151723 These are corporate acts attributed to the Group entity, not personal acts of controlling principals.
No public evidence was identified of formal patent co-development or licensing agreements between Hyundai Motor Group and Israeli research institutions (Technion–Israel Institute of Technology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Weizmann Institute of Science). Source classes checked included USPTO patent database records, KIPO public data, and corporate R&D disclosures.127
The combined picture — a dedicated R&D scouting presence (CRADLE Tel Aviv, established 2019; post-October 2023 status unconfirmed), multiple equity investments through a corporate venture structure, supply partnerships integrated into production vehicle programmes (Vayyar radar, Cipia DMS), a fleet-wide ADAS and AV dependency (Mobileye EyeQ, REM platform), a connected-vehicle cybersecurity integration now consolidated within Mobileye (post-Upstream acquisition), and a concluded vehicle telemetry data-sharing relationship (Otonomo, 2019–c.2022) — constitutes a materially significant and multi-layered Israeli technology ecosystem engagement. It is concentrated primarily in the AV/ADAS, EV, and connected-vehicle domains. The Mobileye relationship has deepened in structural significance following the Upstream Security acquisition.
Who Profits Research Center:45 No dedicated published profile of Hyundai Motor Group was identified in the Who Profits database based on available training data. Who Profits focuses predominantly on companies with direct physical operations in occupied territories (construction, infrastructure, settlement services); Hyundai’s relationships are predominantly financial and technological investments rather than physical-presence relationships in occupied territories. Live verification of the current database state is required, as the database is updated dynamically and may contain entries not reflected in training data (Evidence Gap 6). No entry identified — live database verification required.
BDS Movement:[^27b] Hyundai Motor Group does not appear as a primary or named BDS campaign target in publicly accessible BDS Movement campaign materials as of training data coverage. No dedicated Hyundai campaign was identified.
AFSC Investigate:46 AFSC’s database has focused on companies with direct contracts with the Israeli military, settlement infrastructure, or occupation-enabling surveillance. No Hyundai entry identified in available training data. No entry identified — live database verification required.
UN OHCHR Database (HRC res. 31/36 / 53/25):47 The OHCHR database of business enterprises involved in settlement activities (most recent public iteration: 2023) lists 112 companies. Based on available training data, Hyundai Motor Group is not listed. The database predominantly lists companies with operations directly tied to Israeli settlement construction, infrastructure, financial services to settlers, or services specifically enabling settler economic activity in the West Bank. Hyundai’s identified relationships (technology investments, ADAS supply) do not fall within the categories covered by the OHCHR database’s mandate as constituted. No listing identified.
Don’t Buy Into Occupation (DBIO) — 2024 report:57 The DBIO reports focus on financial institutions, pension funds, construction companies, and technology firms with direct settlement activity. Based on available training data, Hyundai Motor Group is not named in the 2024 DBIO company lists. DBIO’s 2024 focus companies include banks, telecom operators, and technology infrastructure providers with specific settlement-nexus documentation. No listing identified.
UN A/HRC/59/23 (Albanese, 2 July 2025):48 This report (“From economy of occupation to economy of genocide”) addresses surveillance, AI, cloud infrastructure, and Project Nimbus (§§36–43) and the broader ecosystem of technology companies enabling Israeli military and settlement operations. Based on available training data, Hyundai Motor Group is not named in this report. The report’s §§36–43 focus specifically on cloud infrastructure providers (Amazon, Google, Microsoft via Project Nimbus), AI/surveillance platform companies (Palantir, Elbit), and Israeli cyber/SIGINT firms. Hyundai’s profile — as an automotive OEM with Israeli-origin technology investments rather than a cloud or surveillance platform company — does not fall within the primary categories addressed in those paragraphs. Full text verification against the published UN document is required given the report’s proximity to the edge of training data coverage (Evidence Gap 14). No mention identified — full text verification required.
No public evidence was identified of an organised boycott, divestment, or sanctions campaign specifically targeting Hyundai Motor Group on grounds of technology provision to Israeli state entities or operations in occupied territories. Source classes checked included BDS Movement publications, Who Profits, the AFSC Investigate database, and academic BDS literature.
European GDPR — Italy & France (April 2023): Hyundai Motor Europe was subject to regulatory scrutiny following the disclosure of a data breach affecting vehicle owner personally identifiable information (PII) in France, Italy, and other European markets.2526 This action is a general data protection compliance matter. No nexus was identified between this breach and Israeli technology vendors, Israeli state entities, or occupied-territory data flows. It is documented here for completeness; it does not fall within the core V-DIG audit scope.
No public evidence was identified of export control enforcement actions, sanctions investigations, or regulatory inquiries specifically relating to Hyundai Motor Group’s technology sales or services to or from Israeli state entities. Source classes checked included US Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) enforcement actions database, EU export control records, Korean Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE) export data, and trade press.28
https://www.hyundai.com/content/dam/hyundai/ww/en/images/company/ir/reports/2023-hyundai-motor-integrated-report.pdf ↩↩↩↩
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hyundai-mobileye-idUSKCN1PM0AO ↩↩↩↩↩
https://techcrunch.com/2019/11/12/hyundai-motor-group-invests-in-innoviz-technologies/ ↩↩↩
https://innoviz.tech/press/innoviz-technologies-and-hyundai-mobis-partner-on-lidar-for-series-production ↩↩↩
https://www.hyundaimotorgroup.com/story/CONT0000000000000763 ↩
https://www.hyundaimotorgroup.com/Innovation/Open-Innovation/CRADLE ↩
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ree-automotive-hyundai-idUSKBN29A1CF ↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1836875/000119312521193064/d147986df1.htm ↩
https://techcrunch.com/2020/09/30/storedot-raises-80m/ ↩
https://www.store-dot.com/post/storedot-closes-80m-series-d-funding ↩
https://www.automotive-world.com/news/vayyar-imaging-partners-with-hyundai-mobis-for-4d-imaging-radar/ ↩↩↩↩
https://vayyar.com/blog/vayyar-selected-by-hyundai-mobis-as-4d-imaging-radar-supplier/ ↩↩↩
https://www.automotive-world.com/news/cipia-vision-formerly-eyesight-technologies-collaborates-with-hyundai-mobis/ ↩↩↩↩
https://upstream.auto/blog/upstream-security-hyundai-motor-group/ ↩↩↩↩↩
https://www.calcalistech.com/ctech/articles/0,7340,L-3895630,00.html ↩↩↩
https://www.otonomo.io/press/hyundai-joins-otonomo-platform/ ↩↩
https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-hyundai-opens-rd-center-in-tel-aviv-1001295478 ↩
https://www.calcalistech.com/ctech/articles/0,7340,L-3887205,00.html ↩
https://electrek.co/2021/01/05/hyundai-kia-back-israeli-ev-startup-ree-automotive-300m/ [^22b]: https://www.theverge.com/2021/8/16/22626998/hyundai-aurora-autonomous-trucking ↩
https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-hyundai-motor-invests-in-storedot-1001343611 ↩↩
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/hyundai-data-breach-exposes-owner-data-in-several-european-countries/ ↩
https://www.securityweek.com/hyundai-data-breach-impacts-owners-in-france-and-italy/ [^27b]: https://bdsmovement.net/act/economic-action [^28b]: https://whoprofits.org/about/ ↩
https://www.hyundai.com/content/dam/hyundai/ww/en/images/company/ir/reports/2023-sustainability-report.pdf ↩↩↩↩
https://dart.fss.or.kr/dsaf001/main.do?rcpNo=20230330003737 ↩↩↩↩
https://www.businesskorea.co.kr/news/articleView.html?idxno=30042 [^32b]: https://www.theverge.com/2020/12/11/22170744/hyundai-boston-dynamics-acquisition-softbank ↩↩
https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-hyundai-joins-moovit-ecosystem-1001253021 ↩
https://www.mobileye.com/news/mobileye-acquires-upstream-security/ ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001819989&type=20-F&dateb=&owner=include&count=40 ↩↩↩
https://www.calcalistech.com/cttech/articles/0,7340,L-3968011,00.html ↩↩↩
https://www.hyundaimotorgroup.com/About/governance/leadership ↩
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1800227/000119312522263174/0001193125-22-263174-index.htm ↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-hyundai-cradle-tel-aviv-update-2023 ↩↩
https://www.reuters.com/technology/ree-automotive-cut-headcount-85-2023-10-17/ ↩
https://www.store-dot.com/news ↩
https://www.calcalistech.com/cttech/articles/0,7340,L-3951024,00.html ↩↩
https://techcrunch.com/2022/07/11/otonomo-urgently-merge/ ↩↩
https://www.hyundai.com/content/dam/hyundai/ww/en/images/company/ir/reports/2024-hyundai-motor-integrated-report.pdf ↩↩
https://dart.fss.or.kr/dsaf001/main.do?rcpNo=20240329003737 ↩↩↩
https://investigate.afsc.org/ ↩
https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/sessions/database-hrc-res31-36 ↩↩
https://documents.un.org/doc/undoc/gen/g25/127/10/pdf/g2512710.pdf ↩
https://techcrunch.com/2021/09/07/vayyar-imaging-raises-108m-series-d/ ↩↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001800227&type=20-F ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://www.startupnationcentral.org/company/hyundai-motor-group/ ↩
https://www.icj-cij.org/case/186 ↩
https://www.icc-cpi.int/news/situation-state-of-palestine-icc-pre-trial-chamber-i-rejects-state-of-israels-challenges ↩
https://www.caranddriver.com/research/a32880237/hyundai-kia-mobileye-adas/ ↩↩↩↩
https://www.autonews.com/technology/innoviz-bmw-lidar-production-2023 — Note: End notes [^27b] and [^28b] resolve to specific sub-pages of the BDS Movement and Who Profits websites respectively. These should be replaced with direct article or database-entry URLs upon live verification, per audit source standards. End note 38 is a placeholder URL for CRADLE Tel Aviv post-2023 operational status; no confirming article was identified in training data. End notes 35, 36, 44, 56 resolve to Korean-language databases and press; direct article-level URLs require Korean-language source sweep to confirm. ↩↩↩