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Privacy Electronic Frontier Foundation Transportation

"Smart Plates" Could Betray California Drivers' Privacy 262

An anonymous reader writes with news that a California Senate Bill would authorize the state's Department of Motor Vehicles to test a digital registration plate system patented by San Francisco-based Smart Plate Mobile on as many as 160,000 cars. An article on the proposed trial in the Modesto Bee says, in part: "The state hopes the technology will improve efficiencies in vehicle registrations and potentially save the DMV some of the $20 million spent each year in postage for renewals. Privacy advocates say the approach could leave motorists vulnerable to government surveillance by undoing a Supreme Court ruling that required authorities to obtain search warrants before using vehicle tracking devices. 'It means everyone driving in California will have their location accessible to the government at any time,' said Nate Cardozo, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. In 2010, the Legislature considered a similar bill supported by Smart Plate Mobile, with the noted addition of allowing for scrolling advertisements when a vehicle comes to a stop for four seconds or longer." If only it took smart plates to track you.
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"Smart Plates" Could Betray California Drivers' Privacy

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  • by ackthpt ( 218170 ) on Thursday July 18, 2013 @12:18PM (#44318595) Homepage Journal

    I'd love the police to just be able to scan vehicles to see which are active, which plates do not match vehicles and which vehicles have insurance.

    We are plagued by people who do not have valid registrations, borrow or steal plates and have no insurance.

    Bust 'em on the spot.

  • Issues with money... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Capt James McCarthy ( 860294 ) on Thursday July 18, 2013 @12:28PM (#44318739) Journal

    " potentially save the DMV some of the $20 million spent each year in postage for renewals."

    Why would it safe the DMV money. Isn't that paid for when you pay for the registration anyways as part of the fee/tax?
    I have no issue with it, but the savings should be passed to those paying the bills, not for the govt to keep. But they love taking and keeping our money.

  • by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Thursday July 18, 2013 @12:38PM (#44318881)

    I wonder how difficult it would be to *ahem*....de-activate this tech on the plate?

    I mean, maybe the power/battery accidently gets disconnected? Maybe a rock or hammer accidentally smashes some critical part of the plate system? What if the plate accidentally passed in front of some random, activated HERF gun [hacknmod.com]...?

    I think this plate has an LCD screen that displays your license plate number while you're driving, and public service announcements (and ads of course!) while you're parked.

    If you disable it, it will be immediately obvious.

    But my question is, do I have to buy another expensive plate when a rock (or vandal) cracks the screen, or will the state pay for it since they are the ones that decided that the electronic plates would 'save money'? They are claiming that the new plates will save money because renewals will be automatically sent to the plate rather than needing someone to mail out a sticker, but I have a hard time believing that this electronic device is cheaper than a metal license plate that can last decades with the only maintenance being putting on a new sticker every year.

  • by LocalH ( 28506 ) on Thursday July 18, 2013 @12:40PM (#44318901) Homepage

    It's an illusion held by the paranoid or genuinely guilty.

    This is the mainstream mindset, ladies and gentlemen. Those who are concerned about privacy from the government as a default stance, even in public, are "paranoid or genuinely guilty". Yup. No room for the truly innocent to object on moral grounds, if you object to the government being able to track you then you must have something to hide, and to people like this that is the excuse they will then use to violate your privacy in a much worse way. "What have you got to hide, Citizen? SUBMIT"

  • Power? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by magarity ( 164372 ) on Thursday July 18, 2013 @12:42PM (#44318927)

    Where does the power come from for these scrolling advertisements? Will be owner be required to supply a wiring kit to hook it up? Otherwise, how long would a battery last; in an LA traffic jam these plates are going to be running ads for hours at a time.

  • by classiclantern ( 2737961 ) on Thursday July 18, 2013 @01:05PM (#44319199)
    Because of a thing called the Bill of Rights. You can't have free speech without anonymity, and the government has taken that away from us. You can't have freedom of assembly without anonymous movement, and the government has taken that away from us. The government has effectively taken away our Constitutional rights. BTW Mr. Here, our computer puts your vehicle in the vicinity of several known drug dealer's vehicles. That's enough probable cause to get a warrant to search your house, shoot your dog, and plant some evidence. We will be right over.
  • Bring it on! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by kiick ( 102190 ) on Thursday July 18, 2013 @01:10PM (#44319289)

    I for one would love to have a smart license plate. Just think of the hacking opportunities!

    Jailbreak your license plate and display snarky messages to the other drivers on the road. Change your state to "confusion". Temporarily change your plate number and see how many red light cameras you can trip in a row. "Borrow" your rude neighbor's id and run up their toll bill. Steal a smart plate and hack it so you don't have to pay to register your vehicle. The possibilities are endless.

    Any "smart" whatever can and will be hacked. If the incentives are large enough, those hacks will get widely distributed and used. How many incidents of license plate hacking will it take before the police decide it's just an expensive way to enable smart criminals? Not too many, I'd guess.

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Thursday July 18, 2013 @01:18PM (#44319395)

    http://www.infowars.com/special-license-plates-shield-officials-from-traffic-tickets/ [infowars.com]

    California Department of Motor Vehicles' "Confidential Records Program," which was created 30 years ago to keep DMV records of police officers private from criminals. The program has since expanded to cover "hundreds of thousands of public employees - from police dispatchers to museum guards - who face little threat from the public. Their spouses and children can get the plates, too.

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