I think a world where drivers are held accountable for their actions sounds like a just and probably safer world.
If you cause an accident by driving distracted or being reckless I think it's only fair that the facts are known so that you can be punished accordingly. Certainly better than someone innocent having to share responsibility for your mistake.
I think that would probably make people think twice about being reckless and even if it doesn't at least they'll get what they deserve.
I think this is the right way to look at it. Privacy is extremely important to me, but cars are basically lethal weapons. Using them on public roads has to come with a certain amount of responsibility that balances privacy against other goods.
If you had security cameras at your home, a judge could issue a warrant for that footage.
Seems to me that smart car data is similar - in the event of a crash, a judge could issue a warrant for that data if it is deemed relevant to the case.
And either way, honestly, just don't drive like an idiot and this will never be a problem for you.
Yeah and a lot of innocent people have been financially screwed, injured and killed by idiots who don't appreciate the responsibility that comes with driving a car.
If technology can bring those people to justice I'm 100% for it, they deserve it and their victims deserve justice.
I think it's pretty clear that this is not what I'm suggesting, if you can't see that then you're not arguing in good faith and I think my time is better spent on other things than discussing this with you.
If you (or anyone else) has been in a crash, I fully believe that your car should report what you were doing right before to anyone with physical access.
There is no good privacy reason whatsoever to protect that data - the only possible way for the owner of the car to benefit by hiding it is if they caused the accident in the first place.
If it's not my fault then I'll gladly release the data. If it is then I have a 5th amendment right not to. If I'm incapacitated then I don't care and my estate can release it.
> If it is then I have a 5th amendment right not to.
No, you don't. You have a 5th amendment right not to incriminate yourself. That means:
1. You must have committed a crime, which is not a given in a traffic accident.
2. You may not be coerced by the government into incriminating yourself. You are not protected from your property incriminating you. Imagine how absurd a world that would be: the government couldn't use a bloody knife as evidence of a knife attack because the knife was owned by the attacker.
Importantly, you'll also note that if you try not to provide evidence against yourself in civil discovery, you'll end up in a world of shit involving contempt of court.
I think where I take issue is the fact that I believe I should have control and ownership of the data from my vehicle and that such data should be protected by the fifth amendment. The government obviously should be able to look at the car itself or the bloody knife.
When you go to an electrical drive train you quickly realize you need computers for things like battery conditioning, efficiency, forward/reverse, charging, route planning, stop/start, and on and on and on. It's not as simple as engine on, engine off. Tesla (rightly, IMO) chose to lean into this. It will be interesting to see what a company like Slate chooses to do.
Note I said minimal. If manufacturers were content to just restrain integrated circuits to those purposes without widespread telemetry or phoning home, or creating software lockouts we'd meet my definition of minimal. Just what it takes to make a functioning device. Instead, we see software used as load bearing supports for predatory or exploitative/surveillance oriented architectures. That is not minimal to me.
IMO the rules should be simple: manufacturers of electronics need to be required to provide private keys for the electronics, plus a source-available MVP firmware for getting the thing to work.
I don't care if GM or whoever wants to ship a buggy, ad-ridden, data-siphoning, subscription filled nightmare with new cars. That's their decision. But they should be banned from trying to exercise any kind of control over a piece of hardware that I own outright.
If you do an aftermarket EV conversion the car will mostly be built using hardware that you can nearly fully reason about and won't include snitch boxes.