Your car is spying on you.
That is one takeaway from the fast, detailed data that Tesla collected on the driver of one of its Cybertrucks that exploded in Las Vegas earlier this week. Privacy data experts say the deep dive by Elon Musk’s company was impressive, but also shines a spotlight on a difficult question as vehicles become less like cars and more like computers on wheels.
“You might want law enforcement to have the data to crack down on criminals, but can anyone have access to it?” said Jodi Daniels, CEO of privacy consulting firm Red Clover Advisors. “Where is the line?”
Many of the latest cars not only know where you’ve been and where you are going, but also often have access to your contacts, your call logs, your texts and other sensitive information thanks to cell phone syncing.
Not all. Privacy devices do exist.
We do have a deficiency currently in the private car market for privacy cars. Its a good business opportunity.
I’m sure there is a market for something like a 90’s era Civic or Corolla, but with an electric engine, and that’s the only difference.
If I could get an electric car with zero external connectivity, and the internals of an early 2010 vehicle. I’d be interested.
Check about retrofit kits, if you have 20k to put in your car
Yeah and I think there would be a lot of people who would pay a premium to aftermarket privacy-ify their electric cars.
I think there’s other benefits like regenerative braking. I had that in a Prius and the brake pads got replaced like once every 100,000 miles.
Sure, but that’s part of the electric drive train. That doesn’t require spyware or a 27" touch screen.
100% but my point is that newer cars do have better engineering thats more than just batteries and an electric motor.
And, yes it doesn’t require an internet connection or cameras/microphones inside the cabin.