Pay-As-You-Drive Car Insurance 472
Sipos writes "The BBC has a story about pay-as-you-drive car insurance. There is not that much detail about how it would work but it seems that a black box in your car monitors your position using GPS. This information is then reported to a insurance company computer which then works out which roads you used and then bills you accordingly. The article seems to suggest that this will make insurance cheaper. Surely this will only happen for people who drive on dangerous roads less than average, after all there are no less accidents as a result? It also makes no mention of the potential for abuse of privacy this could involve. Are people really prepared to let insurance companies track their every move to save money on car insurance?"
Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:5, Insightful)
They could also know if you were speeding on a certain stretch of road and up your premium accordingly. "We noticed that you failed to signal your intention to turn 18 times last month. Tsk tsk. Oh, and apparently you've been eating at McDonald's quite frequently, so we've increased your health and life insurance premiums, too."
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:5, Informative)
Insurer Eyes Driving Habits [myrtlebeachonline.com]
Insurers offer discounts to customers who allow their driving to be tracked by electronic monitors [cnn.com]
Progressive to Use Data-Logging Device To Help Drivers Save Money On Auto Insurance [businesswire.com]
In the current US trials, reporting the driving information is voluntary. Of course, if/when more consumers participate, I'd expect base rates to go up as the folks most likely to qualify for discouts increase their participation.
Fortunately (or unfortunately for me, since I develop auto insurance rates at another company) the rating algorithm is patented by one company, so I wouldn't expect to see widespread adoption of this technology in the US anytime soon.
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:4, Informative)
My point is that stuff like this can get away from insurers easily and ends up badly when it is not supervised by adults.
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:5, Funny)
Great, so it's not enough anymore to just make a tinfoil hat for myself. Now I have to make one for my car, too!
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:3, Interesting)
Someday, insurance companies will implant GPS trackers in our heads at birth. Wouldn't that be funny if the tinfoil hat people turn out to be right after all?
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:3, Insightful)
>They could also know if you were speeding on a certain stretch of road and up your premium accordingly. "We noticed that you failed to signal your intention to turn 18 times last month.
Umm.. so don't speed and use your turn signal?
Seems like a fair trade for lower insurance premiums.
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:5, Insightful)
Umm.. so don't speed and use your turn signal?
Seems like a fair trade for lower insurance premiums.
How much are you willing to trade for life, liberty and the pursuit of happines? How big of a blue light special discount are you willing to trade for your privacy and personal information?
What if your life depended it, would you speed? What if every time you turn in the supermarket parking lot you don't use your turning signal, does the discount go away? Have they really thought this through? Have you?
First it was the little forms on the bottom of coupons. Then it was shopper cards. Then hidden little black boxes in cars. Then exposed little black boxes and let us use the info since we were going to anyway. And unconstitutional searches everywhere you bloody go from the movies to the airport.
Why don't we just have a sale. All Americans who are willing to give up ALL of their civil liberties in exchange for no taxes and discounts on everything you buy, please raise your hand. The line for your government implant is to the right (where else would it be?). The rest of you on the left are unpatriotic and can check in your citizenship unless you choose to join those on the right.
Don't you understand that what they are "requesting" today will be "mandatory" tomorrow? All these little chips and digs at our rights are just tests to see how much like sheep they can get us to act like before it's too late.
Call this flamebait, trolling, tin-foil-hat, wearing, whatever you want.
But every day we use a piece of our liberty that NOTHING short of complete and entire revolution can give us back.
So yes. Go ahead. Trade your every movement and purchase on this planet for a discount. And next year when the discount disappears but you still have to report your every move, remember this post and all the others like it that called you a fool.
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed, you are right! Here in Oregon you can now get a ticket at 3AM for not going 20mph in a school zone. And the fine is double what a normal fine would be because it is in a school zone. The new signs state: 20mph AT ANY TIME. They used to say "When children are present" which makes sense for safety. Now, safety is secondary, revenue is the goal.
When mandatory insurance laws were proposed, we were told that insurance rates would decrease, but that has NOT ben the case. Insuranc
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:3, Funny)
I don't know how it works where you usually drive, but here in Japan not only do you have to pay a fine, but you also get points. Get to many points in a given period
Damn this is annoying, what's the point of being stinking filthy rich if you can't break the law and
PS:
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:3, Interesting)
The school is expensive, and has a high failure rate, something like 40%. Generally your parents will pay for you to attend the school during summertime after your 18th birthday. Most Germans don't drive before they're 18 years old (unless they're on a tractor).
If you are driving drunk, and are pulled over by the Polizei (think 'pull-at-side'), you will lose your license FOR LIFE. You will never drive a
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:4, Insightful)
The real problem with this plan is that the current mandatory car insurance is there to make sure that if some causes an incident, there is money to pay for damages. Any complicated system that leads itself to abuse will just create more problems.
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:2)
The simplest way would be to take routes that go through steel bridges, underground tunnels, and/or travel during electrical storms.
Then, drivers could learn the cost of each individual section of road and plan their route accordingly. I could imagine drivers would go off the freeway before a complex intersection, take a surface road, then go back onto the freeway.
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:5, Informative)
No, really.
Honestly, that's what she said and I believe her. I will not, however, be signing up for this scheme because insurance companies are amongst the scumiest most two faced companies there are and I don't believe her.
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Big brother-in-law, the insurance salesman (Score:5, Interesting)
Solution? Put it in the cost of gasoline.
Think about it. You need gas to drive the damn thing, you can't skirt around that issue. So the more you drive (and thus the more gas you use) the more you are paying for insurance. Now granted, this has a few flaws, namely that it is the lowest common denominator insurance. But perhaps that's a good thing. Additional coverage and plans above the standard could be purchased above and beyond what the baseline covers and would be strictly voluntary.
You can either read the book (which I found to be very interesting). Or just go to their website, here's the link for this topic
http://whynot.net/view_idea.php?id=499
enjoy
Re:Hacks... how else? (Score:3, Interesting)
"No, I can't come in and fix the server, it'll cost me a fortune on my car insurance."
hmmm, not for me (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:hmmm, not for me (Score:3, Insightful)
And has it ever occured to you that a "discount" for OnStar is the same thing mathematically as a surcharge for not having OnStar?
Wrong turns (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Wrong turns (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Wrong turns (Score:2)
It's probably part of the concept that people who take wrong turns more often than usual pay above-average fees. 8-)
cheaper on average because (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:cheaper on average because (Score:3, Interesting)
I disagree. Let's look at one example of prior art...Cell phones. I have a "standard" cell phone plan. It is X dollars a month, with several hundred minutes of free airtime per month. Let's give an arbitrary 400 minutes a month, for argument's sake. The plan is $50 per month.
My son wanted a particular phone with all the bells and whistles. So he gets one of these pay-as-you-go plans. This plan costs him $0.25 per minute for the first 10 minute
Re:cheaper on average because (Score:2)
This happened with electricity - the many hourly/time-of-day plans local utilities been pushing since the "energy crisis".
That was the case with telephone service.
Bottom line is that the amount of accidents will not decrease, so insurance companies will be spendi
Pay As You go eh? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pay As You go eh? (Score:2)
SWAGGER>
Sorry pal, no way would I EVER do that... With that kind of plan, A single sexual experience would bankrupt most nations! I could never afford it!
Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:3, Funny)
If you smash into a tree, it's your own damn fault if you don't have insurance.
Dear government, please stop telling me how to spend my money.
Thank you.
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:2)
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:2)
--RJ
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:2, Insightful)
This way, you can choose to risk it by not buying liablity insurance. But if you do hit someone, then that person would still be compensated for damages.
I'm just trying to think of new ideas. As long as I can afford liablity, I'll probably but it. What I don't like is laws which force me to buy it even if I don't want it or can't afford it.
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:2)
If you can't afford it, don't drive.
--RJ
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:2)
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:3, Interesting)
$6,700+ for the other vehicle
$6,200+ remaining to pay off on my now totaled car
I moved shortly afterward. The other insurance company sued me, served my previous address and some dimwit signed for it. Insurance company wins a default judgement because I never knew of the suit.
The state suspends my drive
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:5, Insightful)
And what if they hold a minimum-wage job at McDonald's? You'd probably be waiting 500 years to get your money.
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:2)
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:2)
Second, about your sig, which part of "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State,..." do you find difficult to understand? I'm all for allowing people to own guns but I hate it when only half of the second amandment is brought out and waved around. I'm guessing you're not a part of a well regulated militia that is recognized legally.
If it's such an essential service... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:5, Funny)
Here's where my beautiful idea comes into play. If they have no money/assets/whatever to pay you off, you get first crack at their organs.
I'm betting you could get quite a good deal on one of their kidneys. Get said bad driver's kidney, then sell it to some rich couple who's kid needs a transplant. Doesn't matter if they are an organ donor or not.
Would also be an incentive for bad, noninsured driver no to do it a second time.
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:2)
As for smashing into a tree, that is collision insurance, which is optional. Liability is what is required.
Re:Do We Really Need Mandatory Insurance? (Score:3, Interesting)
That makes me think. I was in Kentucky last year and got a ticket for driving without proof of insurance (I'm from VA and plan on moving to NH in a few years). Now I have insurance, just didn't have proof on me at the time, so I'm all right, but what if I didn't have it but it was legal in my state for me not to? Would t
Why not? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not? It makes perfect sense for people who use their car only every once-in-a-while. Why should they pay as much as someone who is commuting from LA to SF twice a week?
I think many people feel they've nothing to hide and would opt for this payment plan if it can save them significant amounts of money. And as long as it is voluntary (i.e. you can always go with a flat rate), I don't see a problem with it.
Re:Why not? (Score:2)
1. The number of miles I drive each year on each car, and
2. The number of miles I drive one-way to work each day.
So, mileage driven is already being taken into account in my premium. This is a more-accurate way to measure it.
I'll stick with my flat-rate plan, though - I don't want my insurance company penalizing me because I speed on the DC beltway, and I don't want to receive a bill that's huge one month because I took a trip.
Re:Why not? (Score:2)
Re:Why not? (Score:3, Insightful)
For one thing, someone who drives twice a month gets a lot less practice driving than someone who drives every day. It's for this very reason that pilots must fly a certain number of hours each month.
Another thing: The roads you drive on make a difference. Highway driving, which is what most of us who commute daily do, carries different risks t
Re:Why not? (Score:4, Insightful)
An automobile is not an airplane.
When you're in your twice-a-day commute, you eventually get complacant and stop paying attention. Really, once you've achieved proficency, no ammount of time is going to degrade your ability to drive--although you might need to take a few minutes to learn the car, which can actually be done in a parking lot or driveway.
Re:Why not? (Score:2)
So you're saying that the system works because people that drive little pay for those that drive a lot. You're right, this is how the system works now.
But why do you say that changing this fundamentally unjust system would raise rates to an unreasonable level? What would happen is that those people that d
Sceptical (Score:2)
I saw the BBC's news report on TV on this a couple of days ago. They did say that this is how the insurance companies are marketing it, but the reporter came over as being pretty sceptical of it actually doing so.
Re:Sceptical (Score:2)
I want my privacy...ooooh! Money! (Score:3, Insightful)
Since when has the general public made it a bpoint to care about their Privacy over Money? You think that the existing lack of privacy occured because the masses didn't have a choice, or were just lazy and took shortcuts allowed by corporations?
I don't trust 'em (Score:5, Insightful)
A great example of the shadiness of insurance companies happened a few years ago in Washington State. The insurance companies lobbied heavily to limit driving privliges for those 16-18 (limited number of minors as passengers, restrictions on driving after dark and whatnot) citing studies saying that it'd reduce the accident rates by a significant margin, which it did. The problem is that they never adjusted the insurance rates downwards to reflect these lowered accident rates, effectively giving their profits a big boost.
Re:I don't trust 'em (Score:2)
They do one thing that increases the survivability of minors, decreases the accidents on the road, and made driving safer for everyone, so profit on it.
If they had invented a device to do so, they'd make money off it too. They just passed laws, however, that improved the quality of life of *everyone* on the road, and their families. Why shouldn't they profit off it?
There is no one less worthy of the trust (Score:2)
No kidding. For *years* I waited, with ridiculous premiums and no claims, with the guarantee that my premiums would drop dramatically when I turned 25, because of statistics and risk groups blah blah.
Two weeks after I turned 25, my premiums went up $20. I didn't even bother to ask why, I simply switched to another company, who took $100 o
Re:I don't trust 'em (Score:2)
Then they dropped us for having a business on our property - in the barn. OK, we split that off. The problem is that because of our business insurance for that address, they KNEW we had a business.
Re:I don't trust 'em (Score:5, Interesting)
If you buy a second car (so as to have a big one when you need it and a small one when you don't) you cannot use your no claims bonus on both cars, even if you can't drive two cars at once! If you get a minibus, you cant use the no claims bonus from a van on the minibus, or vice versa, even if both are the same Ford Transit body.
You have to declare the value of the vehicle when you apply for a policy, but if you write off the vehicle, they value it half what you did. I could go on, but no need ... its pretty clear that these people are major league crooks. And they use the fact that insurance is compulsory to demand money with menaces. (Pay insurance or we send the boys in blue round to visit...)
what i'm willing to do (Score:2)
Basically i'm willing to sell my soul to the devil for cheaper insurance. If the devil wants me to drive with a black box, then so be it.
Kinda creepy, and probably only worth it to a few. (Score:2)
Can you imagine all the different things they would see you do that could cause them to increase the rates? Driving more than 500 miles a month, driving after 10pm, driving home from a bar, speeding any amount, rolling stop signs, driving in the rain or other poor weather, driving in heav
Re:Kinda creepy, and probably only worth it to a f (Score:2)
Re:Kinda creepy, and probably only worth it to a f (Score:2)
Your rights online? (Score:2)
Dupe of Previous Story (Score:2, Redundant)
I think Michael's RAM chips need a parity check. There's a failed chip in there somewhere...
p
Monitor my driving? (Score:2)
I currently pay $1500 a year, with a PRISTINE driving record, for a 100% paid-off nissan, and a 2002 Jeep wrangler (still making payments).
I drive ZERO miles to work, and average 10-20 miles per week.
Why I am paying this much for insurance? Because I'm living in a state with bad statistics. I would GLADLY let my insurance company monitor my driving, or lack thereof, to save money (if the money's right, of course)
"I'm sorry sir..." (Score:5, Insightful)
People don't seem to realise that an insurance company's sole purpose in existence is to NOT pay out on claims. Otherwise how do they increase their profits?! Anything that can help them reduce the percentage of claims that are paid out will be snapped up.
Re:"I'm sorry sir..." (Score:5, Insightful)
--RJ
OT sort of (Score:2)
This is true of all insurance, including malpractice. There's increasing evidence that the "runaway malpractice crisis" in America is actually a simple cyclical effect, as the market fluctuates. But pretty soon we're probably going to institute "tort reform" that will strip patients and consumers of redress in court, while doing nothing to actually rein in costs. But at least we'll stick it
Re:"I'm sorry sir..." (Score:2)
Same thing in my book: how the heck to the big insurance companies and casinos exist if they're not totally shafting their clients?
I think the best type of insurance 'company' I have seen is the old 'mutual society' type, whereby all premiums are invested, and investmen returns over and above a certain safety buffer (after covering costs) are retu
Re:"I'm sorry sir..." (Score:2)
Re:"I'm sorry sir..." (Score:2)
My point was simply that if this system provides information that the insurance company can use to incrimitate you in any way, allowing them to revoke the 'no-fault' section of your policy, then rest assured they will use it.
Cheaper Insurance (Score:2)
When I moved to an area where insurance is cheaper, from the high-traffic centre of town to a community ten minutes outside the city limits but still less than a twenty from work, my insurance went up because I was driving further. When I later moved back into town, it went up again because, although my drive was now five minutes, traffic is higher in town. Is this the kind of "cheaper" they mean? It usually is.
Your life is an open book anyways (Score:4, Insightful)
People don't have a problem with their credit card companies tracking every cent they are spending, so why should they have problems with this?
To answer your question.. (Score:2)
No.
Not on your nelly.
I hope that's clear enough.
You ask (Score:2)
Answer: Yes. People are stupid and short-sighted.
Re:You ask (Score:2)
Privacy invasion not necessary (Score:2, Interesting)
However, for some reason it seems highly unlikely that they would ever do it this way.
Um... (Score:2)
How about if I don't crash, you assume I was completely safe and don't charge me anything?
No? Oh, I bet you just want to use this to make me pay MORE?
Total cost: cheaper? (Score:2, Insightful)
Second thought: Installing such things in each cars is going to cost money. How will such expenses make insurances cheaper?
the thing that really bothers me... (Score:2)
One or the other. Not both.
Bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Our conversation was about health care premium reductions for opting out of "maternity" services. But I think the same arguments apply here. Basically, this kind of system defeats the core purpose of insurance; namely, to share risk.
There are times when charging more for a given behavior makes sense (eg quitting smoking) and times when it doesn't (eg driving in safer neighborhoods). Basically, given that people for the most part can't choose where they drive, this amounts to a violation of the risk sharing priciple. It doesn't drive down overall premiums, simply shifts those premiums to an unlucky subset, while getting others a break the didn't earn.
And of course, the system is designed to encourage safer driving, but we already have that in the form of accident reports and moving violations, which bring up your premium dramatically when you commit them.
I don't want to see a system where the rich folks get lower premiums due to driving in suburbs, while urban drivers get nailed. It leads to that insurer ending up with safer drivers overall (as the higher premiums for those in Compton drive them out of the insurance pool). In fact, in most cases such preferential insuring is actually illegal.
You can't accept only low-risk drivers as an insurer, because doing so breaks the risk-sharing concept that underlies the whole system.
Simpler approach...gas tax for insurance (Score:2)
Re:Simpler approach...gas tax for insurance (Score:2)
Keeping inattentive/drunk drivers of the road would help keep the costs down, too. (Perhaps impounding their cars, selling them, etc would do it)
Re:Simpler approach...gas tax for insurance (Score:2)
I'm against this idea of having a GPS device in the car because it just adds more cost and more overhead. Look at the EZ Pass system on the east coast. It's great for consumers, but the state governments were losing a lot of money on it.
I'm all for the simplest idea possible. I think this just
People will do it (Score:2)
Sadly, the answer is yes. I think most people would care much more about their money than their privacy.
Less greenhouse gas emission (Score:4, Insightful)
These would seem to be the major benefits of this
idea by far, in the grand scheme of things.
Also. There's no need to track everywhere the car
goes in Orwellian fashion. All you need is a new
design of tamper-proof odometer that can be read
once a year when you renew your insurance.
True Pay as you go... (Score:3, Interesting)
oh, wow! (Score:2, Insightful)
They're joking, right?
Picture this:
You get carjacked. And because the carjacker assumes that you have the GPS setup, he kills you and dumps you in the trunk/boot or something. He then knows he has a certain amount of time before someone or other figures out you're missing, and at least 48 hours after that for the "missing person thing." In that amount of time, the car can ea
Great savings for Young & Pensioner Drivers... (Score:3, Insightful)
-annual- premiums, even if they don't drive
that much (unlikely, but - hey - with Internet
& other hacking activities eating up our time,
there's less left over for cruisin'...
Excellent idea, who's time has come...
ie, as soon as it becomes sufficiently
hack-proof to work... eg, with independent
checking stations installed, a one-City-only
policy could work (every time the car passes
an automatic toll-RFID station, it could
broadcast its ID & the number of KM's driven,
up to that point, which could be relayed to
the insurance company...)
An argument in it's favour (Score:2)
Since most of the comments so far seem to be negative, here's a sound economic reason why this could be exactly safe drivers need.
This new way of insuring aims to tackle a fundamental flaw in insurance -- that there is an Information Asymmetry [wikipedia.org] between the insurer and the insured. People know more about their driving habits than their insurers, so can tell if a policy is good value for them. People who drive on dangerous roads will flock towards high-value policies, knowing that they are likely to benefit
Add it to the price of gas. (Score:3, Interesting)
sounds like a scam to me (Score:2)
My guess is that they'll use these devices to provide justification for raising rates. You'll notice that insurance companies claimed that seat belt and helmet laws would result in reduced rates as well, but they never did - in ANY state that passed these laws
"Free market" does not apply here. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No thanks (Score:2)
I'll pass too and wait for this the idea to mature before they mess up my insurance.
Re:No thanks (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly the opposite is true... (Score:3, Insightful)
The insurance companies WANT to know that information so they can root out and refuse coverage to the high-risk pool of drivers. That would allow them to reduce their risk, reduce their costs (reinsurers), and make a boat load of cash. The problem is that it SCREWS the high-risk group since they have to pay OUTRAGEOUS costs for insurance, and you end up with a hunk of people who are uninsured.
This is essentially what health care is dealing with right now. As costs and liability goes up and technology in
Re:Uk resident's view (Score:2)
They are getting rather overzealous with those. I have a friend who had the police knocking on his door to find out if the 5 year old Escort parked outside his house was his... because it had been reported as abandoned. If he'd been away for two weeks, it would have been towed away. If he'd been away for eight, it might have been scrapped before he found out about it.
Re:Simple Fix (Score:5, Informative)
Some people do try that. However, odometers are designed in such a way that it obvious to see when the number has been reversed (the gears have assymmetric shaped teeth that allow the odometer to count upwards). Odometers which have been "clocked back" usually have numbers that are misaligned like certain styles of web page counter.
VERY informative! (Score:2)
Paul B.
Re:Privacy Concerns? (Score:2)
Maybe Joe Blow Paperpusher doesn't give a flying fuck about where you're driving. But your psychopathic ex may give a flying fuck, and Psychopathic Ex could have enough money to pay off Joe Blow Paperpusher to provide information as to your driving patterns.