The ICE electronic control hardware is official McLaren.
You cannot use this hardware in a free way. You have to use the first layer of software that mclaren gives the teams.
So you can relate torque setpoint of the engine to many parameters, but not all you want, because it's simply not there for you to play with. Consequently, it's not easy to do TC or ABS on the ICE.
However, not all ERS components are standard, and one could theoretically exploit that. You can say you cut power momentary to the MGUK because batteries were about to be fried, and FIA would have to believe you. You can relate that torque reduction to wheelspin, wheel load, steering position, lateral acceleration and gyro speed and acceleration, which will in all make a decent TC, plus minus 120Kw.
So TC and ABS are to be expected as soon as teams solve their initial software glitches, but in a very limited way. The way they plan to control it is to plot a graph with MGUK torque vs time and see if they see something funny. It's quite easy to see, so no team would be able to use it extensively, but extremely subjective. I think they should simply allow two modes of MGUK: normal and limp home (in which the torque is derived from either one of two maps with not tc related parameters such as wheel spin). If torque in any hundredth of a second doesn't match the map, exclusion.