- Banned
- #31
I bet most of you, a certain demographic, choose stuff like this and don't even realize it because you're in a cult..
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Care to elaborate?I bet most of you, a certain demographic, choose stuff like this and don't even realize it because you're in a cult..
I WONT HAVE ONE... I LIKE OLDER STUFF ANYWAY MY 97 PURRShttps://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/federal-surveillance-tech-becomes-mandatory-161321992.html
Found in the JL Forum....Here are a couple blurbs quoted from same:
- Your next car purchase comes with an unwelcome passenger: a federal mandate requiring surveillance technology that monitors your every blink, glance, and head nod.
- Infrared cameras and sensors create a constant biometric assessment of driver alertness and sobriety.
- The tech involves infrared cameras mounted on steering columns or A-pillars, tracking eye movement, pupil dilation, and drowsiness patterns. Unlike the breathalyzer ignition interlocks from DUI convictions, these systems operate passively
- If the AI determines you’re impaired (blood alcohol ≥0.08% or showing fatigue), it can prevent ignition startup or limit vehicle speed.
- The surveillance rollout targets late 2026 to 2027 for all new passenger vehicles.
- While NHTSA’s final rule faced delays beyond the November 2024 deadline, automakers will still get 2-3 years for full implementation once regulations are finalized. Your current vehicle stays surveillance-free, but shopping for a 2027 model means accepting this digital copilot.
- The privacy implications extend beyond federal oversight. While the law doesn’t mandate external data sharing, manufacturers could potentially upload biometric data to corporate servers, raising concerns about sharing with insurance companies to adjust your premiums based on driving behavior.
- The federal government promises this surveillance saves 9,000-10,000 lives annually. Whether that justifies your car becoming a mobile panopticon depends on how much vehicle autonomy you’re willing to trade for theoretical safety gains.
HP Tuners will hand you over as quickly as they did diesel delete folks.I can't wait to write this out with HPTuners when the day comes.
The car company does not have access to the PCM Datalogs unless the mfg gets to that unit OBD port to connect (perhaps ON Star could) to extract the data and you noted a Warrant is / should be required.The way the law is written is that all that assessment is required - but it does not require internet connectivity. The intention seems to be that the car does that assessment itself, as far as I can tell there's nothing that's being reported directly to any government agency, the same way the car knows if you have your seatbelt on, but isn't reporting that over the wireless modem. Of course that data is being stored locally in the datalogger and could be pulled if you get into a crash, but that would usually require a warrant unless the car company has the data and willingly turns it over (in exchange for a moderate "processing fee").
Exactly. If technology is going to be mandated to improve driving safety, it should instead be front and rear dashcams to help monitor and document the thousands of dangerous morons around me.So I don't really trust any "monitoring" device inside a vehicle that's going to evaluate my ability to operate a vehicle. Maybe a breathalyzer, but that's why I have a pack of mint gum in my cars.
What ever do you mean?I bet most of you, a certain demographic, choose stuff like this and don't even realize it because you're in a cult..