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akouri | 1 year ago

We're entering the age where having private, personal space is becoming almost impossible. If you have a conversation around your phone, you best believe that government actors can tap that mic. If you have a conversation at home, either your "smart" TV, fridge, or Google Home / Alexa is listening. Now, cars are just becoming tablets on wheels.

In my Tesla, I am quite literally, being watched every time I drive. There is a tiny camera behind the rearview mirror. I have to assume that my vehicle will collect data that could be used against me in court. It's a weird shift, going from a completely analog & disconnected vehicle now to an internet-connected tracking device. You truly think about every move -- e.g. "Gee, I hope my insurance company doesn't misinterpret this 'hard braking event' as me being an irresponsible driver."

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toomuchtodo|1 year ago

Tesla does not divulge your location to law enforcement without a warrant, and stands out amongst other automakers who simply hand it over. They also were one of few automakers who wasn't selling your data to LexisNexis Risk Solutions for insurance pricing.

https://www.tesla.com/legal/privacy

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/11/technology/carmakers-driv... | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39666976

https://www.ftc.gov/policy/advocacy-research/tech-at-ftc/202...

Edit: Obligatory political process call to action: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40203558

(own Teslas, have submitted comments to Senator Wyden and the FTC on the topic, responsible for data security and privacy at a fintech, thoughts and opinions are my own)

tjohns|1 year ago

> They also were one of few automakers who wasn't selling your data to LexisNexis Risk Solutions for insurance pricing.

I don't understand how this practice is legal. There really should be a way to request that my driving data is deleted, or at least opt-out from having it sold.

I've also been trying to get LexisNexis to share a copy of my consumer file with me - which they refuse to do because of "identity verification" purposes, even though they don't ask any questions on the form to establish identity. I feel like they're intentionally making it hard for individuals to see what data they have on them.

dietr1ch|1 year ago

my bike manufacturer does not divulge my location either, but in a much easier to trust way and without a possibility for circumvention.

Cars knowing their own location can be really useful, but why does the manufacturer need to know about it? and to begin with, why are they allowed to know about it?

brutal_chaos_|1 year ago

> Tesla does not divulge your location to law enforcement without a warrant

Good to know, but legally this can change whenever Tesla wants, no?

Waterluvian|1 year ago

And yet I trust Tesla less because I observe their CEO as erratic and unreliable.

I agree that facts are facts and weigh a lot, I can’t exactly shut off the human nature in me that simply does not trust anything that guy controls.

kotaKat|1 year ago

> I have to assume that my vehicle will collect data that could be used against me in court.

They always have, for a long time. Exploring event data recorders is an interesting art to get into and put together how crashes play out, sensor-by-sensor.

To play along at home: https://crashdatagroup.com/ -- amusingly, one of the referrals mentioned on the page was essentially "Someone hit my parked car and then claimed I was driving it at the time" -- the EDR sounds like it saved them from a fraudulent claim.

FireBeyond|1 year ago

That really, really depends.

My stepdaughter was involved in a he-said, she-said collision in a lighted intersection. "I believe I had the green light", "no, I believe I had".

So me, thinking, talking to insurer, "While not definitive, if the EDR shows that she was a complete stop for 30s before moving, that might show she was stopped at a red, and then went when it turned green".

Insurer: unless we're looking at six digits in a claim, we're not pulling EDR data.

They did treat it as a not-at-fault collision, because fault could not be determined, but still.

Tesla will make you fight them to get access to your own EDR data. But will hold press conferences where they'll tell the world all about your EDR data if they think it will move the spotlight away from AP/FSD (fatal accident a few years ago where they were suspected to be involved. Tesla holds a press conference, "Akshually, the vehicle had told the driver to be more attentive". And it had. But Tesla didn't mention that it had only done that once. And that that one time was EIGHTEEN MINUTES prior to the collision. They just wanted to make it sound like an irresponsible driver.)

eldaisfish|1 year ago

This mischaracterises the point.

The scale at which data collection now happens is unprecedented. The fact that data collection and sharing is now a continuous process is unprecedented.

claiming that this has always been the case is disingenuous.

driverdan|1 year ago

It's not almost impossible. You're choosing to buy a Tesla and connect your "smart" appliances to the internet. You have other options.

The only person to blame is yourself.

I'm not saying companies should be allowed to do this, we really need a comprehensive privacy bill of rights, but you don't have to buy this crap that tracks you.

adamomada|1 year ago

What I hope for is what amazon has done with the mic controls on a few devices (fire tv cube, echo, others?) where a teardown has proven that the hardware button to disable the mic physically disables the mic from possibly working while the light is on, and additionally makes it impossible for the software to enable it (until power cycle, where they have the firmware re-set it during boot and can verify it by seeing the light on again)

Making this kind of circuit mandatory and hopefully a default that you have to switch on is the solution to keep both groups happy.

I can dig up the article that shows the schematic if anyone needs evidence

mc32|1 year ago

One option that’s not great, is to follow the Amish —though the feds like irritating them from time to time. Maybe another is Indian lands, but who knows, they will likely find ways around that too.

gosub100|1 year ago

The natives using their sovereignty to sell us our freedom back from a tyrannical government. You might be on to something, if they could sell colocated rack space on the reservation that was somehow immune to government snooping.

bombcar|1 year ago

What you have to do is stay just under the radar without looking like you're staying under the radar.

The Amish stand out. But mc32 driving a 1998 Volvo with no cell phone does not stand out.

sharperguy|1 year ago

It's not just hard. It's suspicious in and of itself, and it supports terrorism/climate change/fraud/hackers/sex traffickers etc etc.

vundercind|1 year ago

> Gee, I hope my insurance company doesn't misinterpret this 'hard braking event' as me being an irresponsible driver.

Oh man, I had one of those boxes insurance companies send out to record you so you can qualify for lower rates for a couple weeks (my wife signed us up for it) and I felt like I was driving so much more dangerously with it on. But all my graphs would have been reeeeeal smooth.

mistrial9|1 year ago

> If you have a conversation around your phone, you best believe that government actors can tap that mic

please less ranting and more substance

> In my Tesla, I am quite literally, being watched every time I drive.

this is somehow new ?

> an internet-connected tracking device

yes, the phone has emboldened these products and the gloves are "off"

gordon_freeman|1 year ago

> You truly think about every move -- e.g. "Gee, I hope my insurance company doesn't misinterpret this 'hard braking event' as me being an irresponsible driver."

This reminds me of the "Thought Police" from 1984.

Animats|1 year ago

In 1984, you never knew if they were watching. Now you know they're watching.

yumraj|1 year ago

> There is a tiny camera behind the rearview mirror.

Can you not cover it, or do you lose some functionality if you do so?