EU Ruling: Self-Driving Car Data Will Be Copyrighted By the Manufacturer (boingboing.net) 69
Yesterday, at a routine vote on regulations for self-driving cars, members of the European Peoples' Party voted down a clause that would protect a vehicle's telemetry so that it couldn't become someone's property. The clause affirmed that "data generated by autonomous transport are automatically generated and are by nature not creative, thus making copyright protection or the right on data-bases inapplicable." Boing Boing reports: This is data that we will need to evaluate the safety of autonomous vehicles, to fine-tune their performance, to ensure that they are working as the manufacturer claims -- data that will not be public domain (as copyright law dictates), but will instead be someone's exclusive purview, to release or withhold as they see fit. Who will own this data? It's unlikely that it will be the owners of the vehicles.
It's already the case that most auto manufacturers use license agreements and DRM to lock up your car so that you can't fix it yourself or take it to an independent service center. The aggregated data from millions of self-driving cars across the EU aren't just useful to public safety analysts, consumer rights advocates, security researchers and reviewers (who would benefit from this data living in the public domain) -- it is also a potential gold-mine for car manufacturers who could sell it to insurers, market researchers and other deep-pocketed corporate interests who can profit by hiding that data from the public who generate it and who must share their cities and streets with high-speed killer robots.
It's already the case that most auto manufacturers use license agreements and DRM to lock up your car so that you can't fix it yourself or take it to an independent service center. The aggregated data from millions of self-driving cars across the EU aren't just useful to public safety analysts, consumer rights advocates, security researchers and reviewers (who would benefit from this data living in the public domain) -- it is also a potential gold-mine for car manufacturers who could sell it to insurers, market researchers and other deep-pocketed corporate interests who can profit by hiding that data from the public who generate it and who must share their cities and streets with high-speed killer robots.
Re:That's the right decision (Score:4, Insightful)
1: When the company sells the car to you, why should the data the car generates remain their property?
2: What market? Auto manufacture and sale is one of the most heavily regulated industries almost everywhere.
3: Where you reading the European Constitution? Because TFA is about Europe.
4: If you were talking about the US Constitution, why would Europeans pay any mind to a 230 year old document? It has next to no bearing on the real world in 2018.
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I was with you until #4. The US Constitution is what our country is founded on and what made our country great, technically its been modified a few times so its not 230 years old. There are ways to change it if you want to, its not easy it takes a whole lot of agreeing. That being said I doubt it happens soon. But you were on to something good there most of the way through.
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Looks like you focussed on whether the USA constitution was 230 years old or not, but missed the fact that it does not wash in Europe anyway.
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1: When the company sells the car to you, why should the data the car generates remain their property?
Do you want them to be liable if the self-driving system causes an accident? Since they need that data both to evaluate liability and to improve their system to reduce their liability, that seems like a reasonable trade. If you want to own the data, fine, but then they're not liable for any accidents caused by the system.
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Until all the car companies decide to lock up their data in the same way, keeping competition out of the equation. It is the same process by which airlines have those insane business rules that all consumers hate but which all airlines enforce, so you’re screwed.
We’re going to need legislation to pry that data loose.
uncopyrightable means manufacturer owns it? (Score:1)
Self-Driving Car Data Will Be Copyrighted By the Manufacturer
"data generated by autonomous transport are automatically generated and are by nature not creative, thus making copyright protection or the right on data-bases inapplicable."
Surely stating that copyright protection is not applicable means that the manufacturer cannot copyright it either.
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You mean "Yes, I bought a car from you 10 years ago but I sold it. Stop sending me spam and no, I don't need to tell you who I sold it to."
Because that is essentially what GDPR is, except that they can't just stop sending you spam, they have to remove your name and address (and credit card number and whatever more they have) from their database.
A couple of years down the line when their computers get hacked you shouldn't have to worry that your credit card information is for sale somewhere.
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The clause was submitted as part of the regulations. If it was accepted then copyright rules would be inapplicable. It was not accepted. This actually leaves the rules in a bit of a grey area.
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Surely stating that copyright protection is not applicable means that the manufacturer cannot copyright it either.
Maybe they can't copyright it, but if they are the only ones with a copy (be sure that will be the case) they can still sell it to people like advertisers.
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You can make a book that contains the sunrise and sunset times and copyright the book. No one is allowed to copy your book.
You can't stop anyone making their own book with the exact same data, as your copyright on your book only protects your designed and layout of the actual book, The data wasn't created by anyone, it's just raw data representing something that happened.
Copyright protects creative effort. If there is nothing creative*, it has no protection.
* for various definitions of "creative"
Re: Automatic data? (Score:1)
It won't be your car for long, auto makers will take a page from Microsoft's business model and go to subscriptions. I'm not talking about leasing either. I mean like you can be driving down the road and they push an update with new terms of service and if you don't accept the car stops, and sometimes the update will eject your passenger ... Or maybe accidentally erase all that data we're debating.
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The data wasn't created by anyone, it's just raw data representing something that happened.
So if I strap a GoPro to my helmet and I bike around the world, I have no copyright on the video ?
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You have the same rights a director would.
You can't stop anyone else from recording video of the same things you did though.
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I don't think the manufacturers of the vehicles that collect the data are going to stop other cars from travelling the same road and also recording their data.
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So if I strap a GoPro to my helmet and I bike around the world, I have no copyright on the video ?
According to this, no you have not. And if some "improved" GoPro in the future were to radio your data back to GoPro's office (or to anyone they sold the link to) they could do what they liked with it including putting your journey on YouTube.
Results unclear (Score:5, Informative)
IANAL, but I've done some research on database copyright law in the EU. So, in the EU, databases (which aren't necessarily data kept in a DBMS, but just collections of data) are not copyrightable except in case of 'sui generis' databases, which are copyrightable 'if they constitute intellectual creation by virtue of the selection or arrangement of their contents.' The conditions a database needs to meet in order to constitute intellectual creation have always been a little unclear to me.
Anyway, whoever wrote the struck-down clause was trying to affirm that these data do not qualify as sui generis, and therefore cannot be copyrighted. But just because the clause was removed doesn't make it obvious that the data do qualify as sui generis and therefore are eligible for copyright. I suspect it kicks the question down the road to some kind of court proceedings. But that's just a guess; it'll be interesting to see what happens.
Eyes on you (Score:1)
So will it take an criminal trial to force them to (Score:2)
So will it take an criminal trial to force them to give out the data?? Say just an basic civil case they can say no DATA for you.
This is not necessarily bad, but probably will be (Score:2)
This is unlikely, the party which voted to remove this clause seems to be firmly in the pocket of business interests, but it's not fair to say that they've sold everyone out just yet.
You'd have to assign them copyright (Score:2)
I'm not a lawyer, but who ever does the work to make the data - the owner of the car telling it to go somewhere - owns the copyright.
It's like Adobe saying anything you create in Photoshop is the exclusive property of Adobe.
It's either data and can't be copyrighted, it's owned by the owner of the vehicle, or the vehicle owner has explicitly transferred the rights of the information.
Re: You'd have to assign them copyright (Score:1)
Because when you buy or lease the car they'll have data release as one of the fine print clauses. So you will be signing it away.
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As a matter of fact, Wolfram Alpha has (or used to have) a very similar assertion - if you discovered something using Wolfram Alpha, Steven himself had to be given credit, or something along those lines. Vis.:
I am not aware of anyone having made an issue out of it either way (and the software i
Right to repair? (Score:3)
Reading the data from the car and doing repair work is an opening to counterfeiting?
Would the EU like to see only authorized companies able to use the car data?
The loss of any freedom to talk about EU car repair on the internet?
What happens when the car owner violates EU car copyright laws?
Your car needs a service.
The car company believes no car should get an unauthorized service.
You are an unfit car owner.
Your car will be placed in the custody of the car company.
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Could this be the EU's way of blocking the right to repair?
Unlikely. Title of the article is contradicted in summary, which states that the data cannot be under copyright at all, which means neither by the car owner nor car manufacturer.
The problem remains that independent repair shops still can't access the historical data, which gives authorised shops advantage. However, even if the car owner holds copyrights to the historical data, this is of no use, since it is held on servers that are not accessible to the car owner. For example, if I buy a book that is printe
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The EU didn't actually say that the manufacturer owns the data though. The merely declined to say explicitly that the data /cannot/ be copyrighted. So the question of if it can be copyrighted is still open, and in the EU databases and this kind of generated data generally can't be.
The way this works is that someone objects to a relatively minor addition late in the day and it's not worth holding the whole thing up to deal with. Essentially they just kicked the can down the road a bit, allowing the possibili
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In unrelated news (Score:1)
Immigrants will only be able to purchase/be given self-driving cars (and trucks).
fight it (Score:1)
Spend your free time at local car dealerships, asking to see cars that don't collect data. Leave when they fail to guarantee it. If you're really bored, start the purchase process and back out at the last minute when you "realize" that the cars collect and share data about you that is beyond your control. The dealerships will put pressure on the manufacturers, or they will sell different cars.
Yet another good reason to tax robots (Score:3)
who owns airplane black box data? (Score:2)
who owns airplane black box data?
as the same type of data needs to be same say in self driving cars
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In other words, there is no data to be owned, and in the case of a crash the data
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Black box isn't the right example. The Malaysia Airlines jet that went missing is a better example. The Rolls Royce engines were sending diagnostic information back to the manufacturer, in which case the manufacturer is asserting ownership of the data. But they probably also "lease" the engines rather than selling them outright. This is what will likely happen with autonomous vehicles.
Access and Assistance Bill 2018 (Score:2)
If you are in one of the five eyes nations the new class of Access and Assistance Bills our Attorney Generals are negotiating will mean data generated by your car can be legally taken without your knowledge and used as evidence against you.
See section 27D [homeaffairs.gov.au]
You had better not unknowingly go anywhere or be around someone you should not.
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And this is why I'll never own a car that have a Wifi AP/LTE/OnStar/BlueLink/FordPass/etc
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