California Protects Black-Box Data Privacy 262
Snowgen writes "According to a story at SFGate.com, California has recently passed a law regulating the little black boxes found in many modern automobiles. The new law requires that manufacturers disclose the existence of such boxes in the vehicle's operators' manual. The law also prohibits the use of data from such boxes without a court order or the permission of the vehicle's owner, unless the data is used in such a way that it can not be traced back to the owner."
Another article..... (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, well (Score:3, Insightful)
Who reads the manual?
Re:Yeah, well (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yeah, well (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Yeah, well (Score:4, Funny)
You guys are like really still in the 90's arn't you? Btw when 2000 comes along for you, dont worry its a bunch of hype.
Not really, but seriously I renember seeing that when I was a kid, but are you sure its car battery paranoia or defrosting their windows and heating the air?
Re:Yeah, well (Score:2)
I'm off topic but i'll take the karma burn for harrassing you about the drive in...
One more thing before I go mr blast from the past... buy... callldddeeerrraaaaaa
Re:Yeah, well (Score:4, Funny)
I can see it now... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yeah, well (Score:3, Informative)
And what's more important, does the manual explain how to turn the system off? And is the system tied in with some critical safety system such as airbags, so that turning off the system will possibly be illegal or at the very least unsafe? I'd like to see the law say that drivers have the option to turn this unit off without compromising vehicle safety features.
Re:Yeah, well (Score:2)
Yea, (Score:4, Funny)
Thank the recall (Score:3, Insightful)
Removal (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Removal (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Removal (Score:5, Informative)
see: US Code Title 15, Chapter 60, sections 2301-2312 [cornell.edu]
I've been making modifications to my vehicles for years, and never had warranty claims problems on other ares of the vehicle. I've completely replaced the *entire* computer on my ducati and it's still covered. The new computer is not, but the rest of the bike that the manufacturer provided is.
Re:Removal (Score:2)
Re:Removal (Score:2)
Re:Removal (Score:2)
Re:Removal (Score:2)
Re:Removal (Score:2)
Re:Removal - Black box is a misnomer (Score:4, Insightful)
It is impossible to remove this "black box" because on any car that supports OBD, *EVERY* computer in the car logs some sort of data. The important stuff is logged in the same computer that controls how your engine runs. It IS possible to clear the data using a diagnostic tool designed to do so. See the SAE J1979 standard if you're interested learning how to do this.
Damn... (Score:3, Interesting)
It sure is helping us little guys...
Scary (Score:2)
Re:Scary (Score:2)
nah. (Score:2)
So what these are used for is say you get in a fatal wreck and claim you were doing 45 mph. Witnesses disagree and say you were doing a more reckless 70. Who's to say? Well, the data contained by the car's computer isn't going to lie. It means the difference between accident and manslaughter, in some cases.
Dang nammit! (Score:5, Funny)
How the heck am I going to determine if my kids have been:
1. speeding
2. not wearing seatbelt
3. popping air-bags
4. drifting
5. figure-eighting
6. parking off a secluded roadside
Big brother, I miss ya!
Re:Dang nammit! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Dang nammit! (Score:2)
If you were hoping that the black boxes would help you spy on your kids, think again. The recorded information in the black boxes can be downloaded only after a crash.
At that point, you'll probably be able to find much more compelling evidence that something was amiss... like the smoldering ruins of your new Buick.
Re:Dang nammit! (Score:2)
Re:if my kids have been: (Score:3, Interesting)
How long before.... (Score:2)
Re:How long before.... (Score:2)
"Or without a court order"? (Score:4, Insightful)
So basically it's as useful as the constitutional amendments that begin "Congress shall make no law..." and end in "unless it makes a law that says it can"
Re:"Or without a court order"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, I'm not a fan of this black box thing, but I don't think you're going to win much sympathy here.
Re:"Or without a court order"? (Score:3, Insightful)
eric
Re:"Or without a court order"? (Score:2)
As for the lawyers trying to get it tossed out...well, I guess whether that works would depend on the
then clearly... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"Or without a court order"? (Score:2)
Re:"Or without a court order"? (Score:2)
If the device aids in actually implementing a law, isn't that fine? Or do you like the idea of being hit by a speeding motorist and not being allowed to prove he was speeding?
Re:"Or without a court order"? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No fault. (Score:2)
CA is a private at-fault insurance. I should know... I was just assessed 100% blame -- quite rightly -- for an accident (I backed into a parked car...
Why the hoopla? (Score:5, Interesting)
The collection of vehicle control evidence is a crucial step in the investigation of traffic accidents. Sheltering that information from the authorities has only one purpose, to shield delinquent drivers from retribution for their unlawful acts.
Even moreso, vehicular event recorders should hold at least 30 minutes of data, including video data, and be downloadable at distance by law enforcement.
Shall we also say again that driving a car is a mere PRIVILEGE and far from being a right????
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:5, Insightful)
The collection of vehicle control evidence is a crucial step in the investigation of traffic accidents. Sheltering that information from the authorities has only one purpose, to shield delinquent drivers from retribution for their unlawful acts.C T-style.
I think we've already been through the loop about "If you aren't ${someevilthing}, then you have nothing to worry about." Well, haven't you ever been late to a critical meeting and gone 10mph above the limit? Haven't you ever forgotten to buckle your seatbelt? And don't even get me started on video/audio data collection... My conversations within a car are indeed private, and should not be accesible by the police, the SS or DHS, or what ever. Especially not at-a-distance-we-don't-have-to-tell-you-PATRIOT-A
Shall we also say again that driving a car is a mere PRIVILEGE and far from being a right????
That very well may be, and probably is, but the possesion of that privilege does not nullify a more fundamental right to privacy.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2)
" Rien ne sert de courir, iil faut partir point ". (It is useless to run, you have to leave on time) One's lateness is no excuse to break the law.
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2)
Think of the little black box as your little cop friend who never leaves you...
Are you volunteering to have a cop monitor you physically, 24/7, to make sure that you never do anything illegal? If not, then you are hypocrite, and you should get off your horse.
Oh, and by the way: stalking is illegal, so it's your point that is invalid.
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2)
When I'm on the road? Well, there, I don't have any expectation of privacy, so I cannot lament the loss of something I never had. But in any case, I do not drive a car (nor ride a horse). But I certainly will not w
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:3, Interesting)
Is it ridiculous for an aircraft to be a tattletale on it's pilots? Or for a locomotive to be on it's crew? Or for a truck to it's driver? The duty of policeme
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2, Interesting)
Despite having "good" reasons for doing these things, they're still unsafe"
Not necessarily. In many municipalities, speed limits are intentionally set lower than the safe "graded" speed of a given road to generate revenue. Studies have shown that the official "Graded" speed of a given road is close to the speed that the average driver feels comfortable/safe. By setting a lower speed limit, the municipality can generate revenue by ticketing drivers who drive with traffic, or drive at the "comfortable" spee
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:5, Interesting)
Do not cast the first stone, O sinner, for I am totally sinless in that respect; I do not have a car, nor ever intend to have one. And I cannot stand being in a car without wearing a seat-belt.
Oh, I'm not talking about recording what you DO, but recording what you SEE from the windscreen... The idea is to see whether you drive like a fool or you simply avoided the other fool who drives like one.
It most definitely **IS**. You can't drive without a license, and you can't have a license without displaying a minimal amount of understanding of the traffic laws and how to handle your vehicle. Abuse that privilege by driving recklessly, and you'll see it pulled from you presto.
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2)
Oh, that's comforting. It's OK for everyone else to lose their privacy, no big deal.
It most definitely **IS**.
Uh, classic example of reading what you expected your opponent to say rather then what they did say. Re-read that more closely.... or perhaps for the first time. Your opponent never claimed that driving was anyth
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:3, Insightful)
What privacy? There never, ever, was any privacy, nor any to be expected, when publicly driving a car in plain public view in the middle of a street.
There was never, ever, any ki
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's fine by me, but only so long as I'm allowed to remotely download the black box of any police car whenever I choose.
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:5, Interesting)
True, it is an eminently public act. HOWEVER, to abuse your Fifth Ave analogy, picking your nose at 0237 is a more or less private act because you have a reasonable expectation that no one will see you do it.
The collection of vehicle control evidence is a crucial step in the investigation of traffic accidents. Sheltering that information from the authorities has only one purpose, to shield delinquent drivers from retribution for their unlawful acts.
Certainly AFTER THERE HAS BEEN AN ACCIDENT. Which is what this California law is intended to protect. Your remote download proposal leads down the slippery slope of downloading your logs and fining you based on infractions that it recorded.
Yes, there are traffic laws. But the fact is nearly everyone pushes them to one extant or another. Whether it's 5 miles an hour over - or 15 over because that's how fast traffic is going. Most traffic laws are in place to guard the public safety. It's been shown in numerous studies (look them up) that it's the DIFFERENCE in speed between vehicles, not the absolute speed that matters.
There's a reason the California Highway Patrol will cruise merrily past a pack of cars travelling at 72 in a 65 zone. They are all technically speeding, but none of them are posing a hazard.
(Of course, CA doesn't use Highway Patrol fines as a major revenue stream as some other states do.)
What this law should do is prevent municipalities and insurance companies et al from abusing the data gathered with the cars onboard systems. Your suggestion reeks of Big Brother.
Regretably, unless more people stand up for their civil liberties, we'll see just the kind of invasive data collection you propose.
Shall we also say again that driving a car is a mere PRIVILEGE and far from being a right????
No argument there. But I won't go into my argument about why it should be considerably more difficult to get a license in the first place. Simple fact is that if drivers were better trained, traffic incidents would drop dramatically.
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2, Insightful)
Absolutely. However, should one choose to break the law and that choice becomes a contributing factor in an accident, then the individual should be held responsible for making that choice.
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2)
So, basically, it's okay to break the law when you don't get caught?
You are therefore advocating lawlessness?
I would argue driving is a right. (Score:5, Interesting)
Not being able to drive is a pretty serious limit on ones freedom to travel.
If driving is indeed a right, by nature, why then do we license it? Safety. Those that do drive have a reasonable expectation of safe roads and qualified drivers. Driving is a right that can be lost if exercised irresponsibly just as many other rights can be.
Let me put it this way. If someone demonstrates they are qualified to drive, is there a reason why they should not get a license? Do they have any expectation such denial will occur? Of course not because everyone has a right to drive provided they do not abuse other people rights while exercising theirs. (Hitting someone with your car infringes on their right to live and prosper for example.)
We deny someone their ability to drive as punishment for poor execution, not because we can. Same for other rights. You might lose your right to move freely if you use that right to kill someone for example. 'nuff said about that, either we agree or not, but I wanted to have the other view present on this thread.
I agree with you regarding driving being a public act, however that does not, in itself, support your idea that law enforcement should be able to access this device at a distance. I think it does support the traffic accident reporting particularly when people are killed. The survivors or other interested parties need to know what happened so the correct decisions can be made. Nothing but good there.
The main problem I have with your distance query is the same problem I have with automated speed detectors; namely, that we should be judged by our peers. That is how the law is written and it is one of the founding principles of this country.
Getting a ticket for doing 5 miles over by an automated machine is simply a tax, nothing more. Think about it. What is punishment without explanation. It's cruel and pointless.
Getting that same ticket because a warm body thought you might deserve it (or not) for some reason is being judged by your peers. That peer who chooses, or not, to write you that ticket will, in the case of writing it, let you know why it is being done and what you should do to avoid having it happen again. That action is what justice and law enforcement are all about. Those same actions can be shown to benefit society in a measurable way.
Those tickets from the automated machine, justifed or not, are simply a tax because no justice was done, no peer involvment took place; thus no corrective action and benefit to society will happen as a result.
So, a cop might download the last 20 minutes of driving. Lets say they do it right after people have traveled down an incline. Every last one of them will be speeding somewhat because that is what the vehicle naturally wants to do in that case. Our law enforcement could then write a ticket, or heck mail a bunch of them without having seen or judged the act.
A possible result: Navigating in traffic down an incline gets more dangerous as everyone concentrates on over control of their vehicle fearing an unwarranted ticket instead of the task at hand; namely, getting down that incline along with everyone else in an orderly manner.
This is exactly why I choose older cars. I can know completly the technologies used and how they will affect me. You don't want too old of a car because you lose the benefit of ongoing engineering however.
Good for California, they want people to know they might be judged in an automated fashion. Knowing the device is there makes a difference in how people react to it. This goes to another right we should have:
We all should have the right of full disclosure on any technology we make use of. If it does something without telling us, it is doing something wrong and potentially harmful that we should know about.
Re:I would argue driving is a right. (Score:2)
Okay. Show me where in the Bill of Rights or the Constitution where car driving is deemed to be an inalienable right, and I'll buy you a beer.
Not my problem. If you have
Your *arguments* are total bullshit (Score:2)
You, as the driver, have to be in absolute control of your speed at all times. If you are unable to do so, you are unfit for the road!!!
Have you ever actually driven? I don't know about you, but I like to occasionally look at the road, instead of staring fixedly at my spedometer. This means that my speed will, on occasion, drift slightly (even if I had "absolute control" over every muscle in my body, there would be variations when I, say, hit a pot-hole and am bounced slightly). This is true for every
Re:Your *arguments* are total bullshit (Score:2)
Re:I would argue driving is a right. (Score:2)
This post is flawed. Terribly. Insightful indeed.
We have the right to travel freely.
and then:
If driving is indeed a right, by nature...
To quote the slashdot crowd and The Princess Bride...You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means.
Is traveling a natural right? I defer to a one Thomas Paine to straighten out your misunderstanding of "rights"
Re:I would argue driving is a right. (Score:2)
Yes, we do.
Driving is a form of transportation.
Yes, it is. But only one form.
Not being able to drive is a pretty serious limit on ones freedom to travel.
Here, we depart. You may travel freely upon any public road. You may be a passenger, take a bus, ride a bike, crawl....all without hinderance.
Due to the damage and injury potential, you must be licensed to operate a motor vehicle.
Since such license can be taken away (or not issued in the first place) due t
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:3, Informative)
It's not like law enforcement CANT get a court order when necessary. It will just discourage them from routinely snooping where it's not warrented.
Want to search my home? get a warrent. Want to search my computer? do the same. If you don't have justification, you won't g
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2)
The operation of your car is done on PUBLIC roads. So the public has the RIGHT to know what you do with your private property while travelling over public property.
And, just as your license plates are the property of the State, the event recorde
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:3, Interesting)
BZZT Law enforcement has no right to use my private property to collect information regarding my activities.
The Amendment preventing unwarrented search and seizure was created to prevent a police body that suspected a subject of a particular crime from searching, and continuing to search until they found him guilty of some crime or other, whe
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2)
BZZZT! Thanks for playing! <bitchy limey voice>You're the weakest link</bitchy limey voice>!!!
The event recorder is not be your property. It is the property of the State, just like the
Personal Privacy Is a Property Right (Score:2)
If we want to make driving a right, we can.
2) "You're right to privacy serves no purpose but to hide..."
I'll take that logic and use that for all information
Exactly, says the RIAA (Score:3, Insightful)
Downloading content on a public network is an eminently public act, and those who do it shall have no more expectations of privacy than someone picking his nose in front of Sack's Fifth Avenue on the morning rush-hour.
The subpenaing of personally identifying information is a crucial step in the investigation of copyright violations. Sheltering that information from the RIAA has only one purpose, to shield delinquent downloaders from retribution for their unlawful acts.
Even moreso, all online activities
Re:Exactly, says the RIAA (Score:2)
There never was any kind of anonymity when addressing the PUBLIC ACTIONS of an individual driving an automobile on PUBLIC ROADS. Those actions are open to the scrutiny of everyone there, from bystanders wishing to avoid being run-over by automobiles, to traffic police officers who are there to reprimand drivers
Re:Why the hoopla? (Score:2)
Okay, show me the article in the US constitution or in the bill of rights that grants you the right to drive an automobile or ride on a plane...
How about amendment #9 (Score:2)
The Ninth amendment to the constuition states:
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
In case you aren't clear on what this means and why it is there:
"I go further, and affirm that bills of rights, in the sense and to the extent in which they are contended for, are not only unnecessary in the proposed Constitution, but would even be dangerous. They would contain various exceptions to powers not granted; and, on
There's an easy way to evade the regulation (Score:5, Funny)
Okay, but... (Score:4, Interesting)
Now if only the government gave the foggiest shit about electronic privacy. People understand "little black box sitting in your car", and they just don't seem to get the other privacy atrocities that go on every day.
Re:Okay, but... (Score:2)
Re:Okay, but... (Score:2)
If i'm dead due to car wreck... they can have the data. I'm not going to care, might as well figure out why i'm dead.
If i'm alive, then not without a court order. This is reasonable because this is MY data.
Maybe it should be mandatory that you be allowed to deactivate or remove these things, like you can with airbags.
You can do this NOW with airbags because they have been proven to be unsafe for small children, not sure how specific the reg is, as in can you dis
Good for them (Score:3, Insightful)
AB 213 (Score:4, Informative)
CA Assembly Bill 213 [ca.gov]
I'd gladly allow access to my blackbox... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I'd gladly allow access to my blackbox... (Score:2)
More Information... (Score:2, Informative)
http://slate.msn.com/id/2087207/
http://
They use the OBD-II interface (Same interface the DEQ guys use to make sure your car isn't pumping out too many noxious fumes.) 5 seconds of data are stored in an EEPROM.
Sorry this sucks (Score:2)
Great Idead (Score:3, Informative)
Great idea. People should know that there's a balck box in their car. Maybe they'll think twice about that reckeless maneuver their going to pull.
A previous poster mentioned dupe, this is not. The previous article [slashdot.org] mentioned how someone was convicted of killing somone 'cause they decided to do ~100 mph down a 25mph resedential street.
Hypothetical future dialog: "Hey son, I trust you and all, but be aware that fi you do try to show off to your prom date tonight, and maybe, umm I dunno, kill someone while your at it, that blackbox recorder could put you away for a long time. Here are the keys, by the way."
Maybe some of this info could also be used to help prosecute people who stage accidents for insurance fruad. I get so sick of seeing these thigs happening. 6 people all loaded up in 2 cars, they bump at 10mph, cry neck and back pain, but they have no idead who they are sitting next to in the same vehicle!
that recorder already exists (Score:2)
Car tuners have for quite awhile been using similar systems.
I agree with the privacy concerns, but (Score:3, Interesting)
there could perhaps be engineering flaws which would could be revealed a lot sooner by analyzing black-box data, possibly saving lives.
this is the idea behind some of them (Score:2)
I believe Volvo goes so far as to dispatch an 'accident team' if a wreck involving one of their cars occurs within a few kilometers of their safety division headquarters. They find out what happened, how the car reacted, etc.
As always, they missed a spot (Score:3, Insightful)
This does nothig to protect a person from the abuse of the information when they Rent a car (c.f. the story of the "speeding penalty" enacted by the one rental agency) or when a person has a "company car".
Finally, one wonders whether this separates the purchasers and leasees of cars into two separately and unequally protected classes.
After all, if you lease a car, your leasing company owns it. So the police could end-around and make a request of them to access the black-box.
Then again, section 215 [aclu.org] lets the FBI do any dang thing they want in the search and seizure arena despite the Constitution.
still don't want the boxes (Score:3, Interesting)
There might be some number of times where the devices could be used to prove your innocence or lack of liability, but I'd rather take my chances without the devices. I mean, how often does anyone really drive the speed limit on the highway?
Of course, my 2002 probably already has something of the sort and I'm probably just ignorant about it. Anyway, I think car safety can be improved over time almost as well without the boxes and the adjoining less of privacy.
all cars record at least some data (Score:3, Interesting)
Your engine computer contains some non-voltile memory that saves any error codes your engine may throw up (misfire, malfunctioning O2 sensor, emissions problem..anything that causes your 'check engine' light to come on) so your mechanical can quickly diagnose problems. For economical reasons, they usually use this same nvram chip to hold the running data for the engine. O2 readings, fuel data and of course, Speed, because vehicle speed is integra
mod the box (Score:2, Interesting)
The court shouldn't use a device like this without the appropriate wariness to it's vulnerabilities.
Indroduce Errors? (Score:2)
The motivation (Score:2, Interesting)
Define Speeding (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Define Speeding (Score:2)
This is not a valid legal argument. I wouldn't even attempt it.
Aftermarket ? (Score:2)
Information can be gleaned from that and the scene of the accident can be reconstructed from that.
Of course, the lawyers (and trolls) will say that those who have nothing to hide shouldn't have to destroy the info.
Drive cars that don't have boxes. Until those are illegal
This is good news, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
We'll probably have our speeds monitored (and our insurance companies notified or even worse, our bank accounts debited) in real time.
Nothing we can do about it. The roads will still have posted speed limits of 55, even though the practical speed of traffic flow is closer to 70. Care to complain? Hey - you were speeding, we have the black box to prove it. Great source of revenue for the states and insurance companies for
Hmm (Score:2)
Re:Media (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Media (Score:2)
I guess the desire is that you can record the other sensors around the engine block to determine angle of impact, speed of impact, etc, and react accordingly. In the early 90s, there were serious issues with "low velocity airbag a
Re:Media (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Phew... (Score:2)