sharpsicle
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2021
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- Tampa, FL / Milwaukee, WI
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Gladiator Overland, 2002 VTX1800
Curious how you think a Gladiator is tracking any of that stuff you mentioned.Cars are found to be the single worse product for data privacy with a lack of security, including smartphones. That's the point of the above research by Mozilla I linked above. Car brands' are more top hat, cape and mustachio than tinfoil hat, with some three stooges mixed in. Stellantis suffered a major recall after 2 hackers gained control of a Cherokee a few years ago.
Several automakers put it on the driver's legal responsibility to get consent for their tracking your passengers, including minors. Many terms of service (ToS) allow them to track things like sexual activity (WTF), intelligence, immigration status, race, facial expressions, weight, health and genetic information (also WTF), and access data on your phone. These are all actually in various automakers' ToS. You tie that data to systems like LexisNexis or Palantir and it can affect your job prospects, loans, and of course legal predicaments.
A wild read is Hank Asher's story, (The Man Who Trapped Us in Databases), ex-cocaine smuggler turned government/industry data oracle and the founder of several data fusion companies like LexisNexis.
btw, if you wish to increase your phone's privacy/security: Android | iOS
Spoiler: it isn't.
If it were, that would clearly be a much different conversation. But it isn't. Putting out a catch-all ToS example as though it's what your truck is actually doing is disingenuous.
I'm all for awareness, but let's not manufacture a situation where it doesn't exist. Unless of course you're just trying to appeal to the tin foil hat crowd.
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Oh, the Facebook security or privacy policy and settings is laughably.