The New York
Times
By JACLYN TROP
JAN. 10, 2014
Cars are becoming smarter
than ever, with global positioning systems, Internet connections, data
recorders and high-definition cameras. Drivers can barely make a left turn, put
on their seatbelts or push 80 miles an hour without their actions somehow,
somewhere being tracked or recorded.
Automakers say they are
only responding to consumer demand, and besides, they and regulators say, the
new technologies help them better understand consumers and make the cars safer.
But privacy advocates increasingly see something more unsettling for drivers:
that someone is always watching.
Now two senators are
trying to give car owners more say over some of that data. Early next week,
Senator John Hoeven, Republican of North Dakota, and Senator Amy Klobuchar,
Democrat of Minnesota, will introduce a bill stipulating that car owners
control the data collected on the device called the event data recorder. The
recorder, commonly known as a black box, collects information like direction, speed
and seatbelt use in a continuous loop. It is in nearly every car today, and in
September, it is set to become mandatory.
“We’ve got real privacy
concerns on the part of the public,” Senator Hoeven said in a telephone
interview. “People are very concerned about their personal privacy, especially
as technology continues to advance,” he said, referring to revelations of
spying by the National Security Agency. Fourteen states have already passed
similar laws.
The data collected by the
black box has already been the center of litigation by law enforcement agencies
and insurance companies seeking to use the information against car owners. The
bill would limit what the data could be used for and would require a warrant to
release the data without the owner’s consent.
But even this legislation
covers only part of what is a rapidly evolving technological landscape.
At the International CES
in Las Vegas this week, automakers and technology companies announced a stream
of new products and services aimed at making cars more connected.
Google announced it had a
partnership with G.M., Audi, Honda and Hyundai to bring its Android platform to
vehicle infotainment systems by the end of this year. At the same time, G.M.
said it would start an app shop, where drivers can use apps like Priceline.com
to book a hotel room and CitySeeker, which provides information about
attractions and restaurants near the vehicle.
The days of a driver
being alerted to a deal at a retailer as he drives nearby are rapidly
approaching.
Many consumers, though,
are unaware of just how much personal information is collected and used,
privacy advocates say.
“Manufacturers do a poor
job of informing consumers and explaining the privacy implications of new
technology,” said Khaliah Barnes of the Electronic Privacy Information Center,
a consumer group based in Washington. “Often, that information is in the
owner’s manual, and when’s the last time you thumbed through your owner’s
manual?”
It didn’t help the
automakers’ reassurances about their handling of data when Jim Farley, Ford
Motor Company’s top sales executive, who is known for making off-the-cuff
comments, told a panel at the CES: “We know everyone who breaks the law. We
know when you’re doing it. We have GPS in your car, so we know what you’re doing.”
Although he quickly added, “By the way, we don’t supply that data to anyone,”
and later issued a full retraction, the comments, even if overblown and meant
to be provocative, fueled the concerns.
Vehicle owners, Ms.
Barnes said, should be able to request the information manufacturers record and
delete information at their discretion.
“Consumers should decide
what level of surveillance they want to be under,” Ms. Barnes said. “None of
that should be on default. You should have to opt in.”
Automakers say that consumers are eager for the new products. At the CES, G.M. introduced a new camera in the 2015 Corvette Stingray designed to give track enthusiasts real-time feedback on their driving. The performance data recorder, as it is called, uses a camera mounted on the windshield and a global positioning receiver to record speed, gear selection and brake force.
The Corvette’s system
goes further than traditional black boxes.
A camera mounted on the
windshield records the driver’s point of view and a microphone in the cabin
records any noises made in the car.
Chevrolet said that the
consumer owned the data, which is collected in a digital card housed in the
glove compartment.
But privacy lawyers say
that the information can still be used against a driver, as well as G.M. and
its suppliers, in litigation or by an insurance company investigating a
driver’s habits.
“The privacy and
liability issues associated with the P.D.R. are as real as with any archived
data that can be used by or against individuals,” said William Kohler, a lawyer
at Clark Hill in Detroit.
The new brainpower in
cars puts the industry in new territory with security and data privacy, said
Thomas Kowalick, an expert in event data recorders and a former co-chairman of
the federal committee that set the standard for black boxes.
“The major concern is not
what an E.D.R. gathers now but that future in-vehicle technologies will make it
possible to virtually record and track a vehicle’s movement from point A to
point B,” Mr. Kowalick said.
Garmin introduced a new windshield-suctioned
camera that turns on automatically when the car starts. It records wide-angle
footage as well as speed, location and time in the event of a collision, and
also has a microphone that can record sound from within the car.
“We hope it takes some of
the ‘he said, she said’ out of an incident in your car,” said Ted Gartner, a
spokesman.
He said the device’s
owner also owned the data and that Garmin could not access it.
“There’s no way that we
have access to that data because there’s no way to transfer the data out of the
car wirelessly,” Mr. Gartner said.
Despite these and other
assurances, the new products are attracting scrutiny in Washington.
On Monday, the Government
Accountability Office released a report stating that some automakers were
keeping private data collected from onboard navigation systems and mapping apps
for varying lengths of time and that car owners could not request that it be
erased.
The report, which was
requested by Senator Al Franken, Democrat of Minnesota, found that the 10
automakers, navigation device manufacturers and application developers surveyed
did not make owners aware of all the risks of the data collection, like
allowing third parties to track their location or gather sensitive information
such as their religious and political activities and preferences.
“Information about your
location is extremely sensitive,” said Senator Franken, who is chairman of a
Judiciary subcommittee on privacy and said he planned to introduce a bill that
would legislate guidelines on when a vehicle owner’s location could be shared.
“If someone has a record of your location, they can figure out where you live,
where you work, the doctors you visit and where your kids go to school.”
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