Re: Mandatory "Event Data Recorders" will even know you're speeding in reverse.
Wrong. GPS don't transmit anything.
Of course they don't, and it's not even implied in the article. That doesn't mean the data cannot be collected and transmitted via other means. Smart phone anyone?
"To whom? Your insurance company, of course."
According to what? Or is this the "non-paranoid" part of the article?
Why not? Ever heard of insurance companies giving away radars/lidars to police? I wonder how many lobbyists are paid by the insurance companies to push for this law...
"Progressive Insurance already has such a system in place -- voluntary, for the moment."
Wrong. They may have an OBDII monitoring insurance plan, that has nothing to do with EDR or this proposed bill.
Just a mere mention of "monitoring" is enough to make me cringe in the case of OBDII. I admit I don't know what that EDR is going to actually function and how different it is from OBDII or a "phone home", real time, full-featured tracking device.
"The question arises: why?"
For the stated safety reason? Naaaaaah.
I buy the safety reason if the data can be read read only with a warrant in hand after a crash and using a direct contact, not via any radio or other remote signals.
"Of course, it's really for the sake of revenue -- the government's and the insurance company's."
How do they make revenue from information they can't access until after a crash?
?? They make revenue from any information even remotely related to driving habits and statistics thereof. I don't trust insurance companies will lower the rates if the data collected from devices like this proves they were overcharging people. Indeed, they never did.
If, and only if, the data cannot be accessed until after the crash there may be some future benefits for safety. Also, under no circumstances would I let that device hold more than a few minutes worth of data. Too many potentials for abuse already, all of which are magnified ten fold if the device is mandated and standardized by the government.
They completely have their story mixed up. There's the insurance implemented monitoring system which consumers can choose, and then there's EDR that is used to analyse crashes for statistical and litigation purposes.
Are we sure the EDR that will be installed as mandatory after 2015 will be the same as the one in voluntary use today? Don't know, just asking myself that question too.
"And naturally, they -- the government, insurance companies -- will be able to track your every move, noting (and recording) where you've been and when."
:lmao:
Time will tell who is going to laugh last...
"In the future, it will be used to limit your driving -- for the sake of "energy conservation" or, perhaps, "the environment." It will be the perfect, er, vehicle, for implementing U.N. Agenda 21 -- the plan to herd all of us formerly free-range tax cattle into urban feedlots. So much easier to control us this way. No more bailing out to the country or living off the grid - unless you get there (and to your work) bywalking.The pieces are all coming together."
This guy needs psychiatric counselling.
The last half is a bit psychotic, I admit, but I lived in a time and place where people with even number plates could drive on even number dates and vice versa. Limiting your right to drive your vehicle is a real possibility and mandatory technology only makes it easier to enforce.
Imagine if OnStar with all it's bells and whistles was mandatory? Who's to say it won't be?
But the worst thing about this article is that it casts a negative light on the most important transportation revolution since the automobile itself, which is self-driving cars.
Now you are going on a tangent in an otherwise valid discussion. Computer controlled cars are not the same as self driving cars. The rest of your tirade sounds just as psychotic as the last part of the bold paragraph above.