December 29, 2003

This Car Can Talk. What It Says May Cause Concern.

New York Times:

Last year, Curt Dunnam bought a Chevrolet Blazer with one of the most popular new features in high-end cars: the OnStar personal security system.

The heavily advertised communications and tracking feature is used nationwide by more than two million drivers, who simply push a button to connect, via a built-in cellphone, to a member of the OnStar staff. A Global Positioning System, or G.P.S., helps the employee give verbal directions to the driver or locate the car after an accident. The company can even send a signal to unlock car doors for locked-out owners, or blink the car's lights and honk the horn to help people find their cars in an endless plain of parking spaces.

...

OnStar is one of a growing number of automated eyes and ears that enhance driving safety and convenience but that also increase the potential for surveillance. Privacy advocates say that the rise of the automotive technologies, including electronic toll areas, location-tracking devices, "black box" data recorders like those found on airplanes and even tiny radio ID tags in tires, are changing the nature of Americans' relationship with their cars.

Posted by Bob King at December 29, 2003 8:54 AM | TrackBack
Related Categories: Area - Tech - Mobile Communications | Industry - Automotive | Quadrant - Social | Quadrant - Technological | Theme - 'Digital Impact'


Amazon Price:






Amazon Price:







E-mail This Story
Email this entry to:


Your email address:


Message (optional):


Syndication
Search


Receive Weekly Summaries

Change Quadrants
Change Themes
Deep Dive
Change Resources
Archives
Powered by
Movable Type 3.33


©Copyright 2003-4 Rugged Elegance, LLC
All rights reserved.