California Poised to Be First State to Stop Geolocation Tracking, New Report Shows Need For Privacy Protections From Connected Cars says Consumer Watchdog
For example, secret recordings of insurance industry meetings revealed in the report show Insurance Commissioner
And while location data can be turned off on your cellphone, there's not yet an opt-out feature for your car. However,
New rules to be promulgated this year under Prop 24—the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA)—should preclude insurance companies and automakers from using precise geolocation without consumer permission. If the geolocation rule and other privacy regulations withstand industry lobbying, it will prevent a host of privacy abuses identified by the report, "Connected Cars and The Threat to Your Privacy." The report was presented to the
Read the report here: https://www.consumerwatchdog.org/sites/default/files/2022-03/CWD%20TELEMATICS%20REPORT%20March%202022.pdf
"Consumers should have the right to say no to being tracked in their cars" said the report's author,
Among the abuses identified in the report are:
- 13 leading automakers reviewed by the United States General Accounting Office reported collecting, using and sharing data from connected vehicles' location and operations.
- Car companies, including General Motors,
Toyota , Ford, reserve the right to collect, use and share data in order to track and market products. - Car manufacturers are working with software companies to bring advertising right into the dashboard. Information from Chevy's OnStar Service is directly fed to apps for Dominos, IHOP, and Shell, among others. Geolocation data customers include retailers like Starbucks, so they can better know when a person is likely to buy a cup of coffee.
Telenav , a software company developing in-car advertising software, touts its "freemium" model popularized by streaming services such as Hulu and Spotify, where in exchange for free services, consumers will be flashed with ads. Pop-up car ads could generate an average of$30 annually per car. In a post on its website, "Why in-car advertising works,"Telenav's case amounted to, "advertising is worth it to the consumer," while disregarding safety and privacy. In this auto surveillance-commerce world,Telenav said there is a large opportunity to capitalize on the$212 billion commuters spend while driving.- Companies tracking us in our cars often claim they traffic in "anonymized data." Anonymized data, when paired with other data points such as credit card usage, can be used to identify you and target you, according to car technologists and privacy advocates interviewed by Consumer Watchdog. Manufacturers have teamed up with data miners to geolocate cars in real time. Wejo, which touts its mobility data of over 10 million connected cars, claims to see the speed in which cars are traveling on 95 percent of
U.S. roads. - One of the biggest misconceptions is that technology is making driving safer. It isn't. The number of deaths per 100,000 miles driven grew in 2020 by almost 25 percent, according to the
National Safety Council (NSC), marking the highest annual increase that the NSC has recorded in nearly 100 years. 2021 saw an increase in traffic fatalities, prompting the federal government to act. California's insurance market is the epicenter of the latest fight over use the telematics, data transmitted from cars. California Insurance CommissionerRicardo Lara recently started a Twitter fight withElon Musk over using telematics data collected by cars in insurance rate setting, vowing to protect, "consumer data, privacy and fair rates." However, an investigation by Consumer Watchdog has found Lara is privately working with insurance companies on a proposal to allow electronic surveillance inCalifornia once he has the "political cover" to pull it off.
According to a recording of a December meeting in
"Yes, so we have a lot of conversations with commissioner Lara in
The remarks are consistent with comments Lara made to a convention of insurance company lawyers in 2019 and captured on undercover video where he stated: "I honestly think that if someone is monitoring the way you're braking or how you're driving - you better believe that's going to change your driving behavior and that's something that can save lives." Lara promised a group of 200 insurance industry lawyers at the
View a short about video about Lara's remarks here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFMHnL1HTH8
"Commissioner Lara needs to reconcile his contradictory public and private statements about telematics and stand behind his public vow of 'protecting consumer data, privacy and fair rates.' He must repudiate insurer attempts to collect telematics," said Consumer Watchdog.
Currently, insurance reform Prop 103 bans the use of telematics to determine auto premiums because, in addition to privacy considerations, factors like braking and sudden acceleration have not been shown to demonstrate a reasonable relationship to a risk of loss. Moreover insurance companies like Root consider their telematics algorithm a trade secret. If Root's metrics for what is considered good or bad driving are a black box to consumers, we won't know what it is using to decide rates, which runs counter to Prop 103's requirement for every factor to be related to risk of loss.
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SOURCE Consumer Watchdog



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