Ford Files Patent to Spy on Drivers

Governments are pushing the public to switch to smart vehicles to reduce ‘fossil fuel’ consumption, but there is also a second motive – surveillance

This September, Ford filed a new patent to eavesdrop on drivers. They plan to share this information with third-parties to personalize the advertisements drivers hear.

Ford will also take the driver’s destination into consideration to determine location-specific advertisements and suggestions.

The technology will factor in the weather, traffic, and all external sensors to fine tune when and what to market to passengers.

Advertisements are perhaps the least ominous use of voice data based on the plans that these car manufacturers have.

Car insurance rates in the United States spiked 26 percent in the past year, which is partly due to car manufacturers sharing ride data with insurance companies.

Even older cars with basic features like OnStar have tracking devices that report your driving behavior to the manufacturers who share your data with insurance companies and, ultimately, the government.

LexisNexis, which tracks drivers’ behaviors and compiles risk profiles, has been sharing individual data with General Motors, who passes that information along to the insurance companies.

One driver demanded that LexisNexis send him his personal report, which was a 258-page document containing every trip he or his wife took in his vehicle over a six-month period.

LexisNexis said that this data will be used “for insurers to use as one factor of many to create more personalized insurance coverage.”

They even reported small issues such as hard breaking and rapid acceleration, according to the report. “I don’t know the definition of hard brake. My passenger’s head isn’t hitting the dash,” an unnamed Cadillac driver enrolled in the OnStar Smart Driver subscription service told reporters.

“Cars have microphones and people have all kinds of sensitive conversations in them. Cars have cameras that face inward and outward,” a researcher with Mozilla Foundation told the Los Angeles Times.

In fact, 19 automakers in 2023 admitted that they have the ability to sell your personal data without notice. Law enforcement may subpoena these records as well.

Ford claims that the patent was submitted, but they do not necessarily plan to use the technology.

“Submitting patent applications is a normal part of any strong business as the process protects new ideas and helps us build a robust portfolio of intellectual property. The ideas described within a patent application should not be viewed as an indication of our business or product plans. No matter what the patent application outlines, we will always put the customer first in the decision-making behind the development and marketing of new products and services,” Ford said in a statement released to MotorTrend.

Now, the US Department of Transportation is permitted to mandate that certain manufacturers provide them with vehicle data. Sens.

Ron Wyden of Oregon and Edward Markey of Massachusetts testified that all vehicles in the United States with a GPS or emergency call system are collecting travel data that car manufacturers have remote access to via the computer chips.

The computer chips are compiling data on vehicle speed, movement, travel, and even using exterior sensors and cameras to record the vehicle’s location.

All of this violates the Fourth Amendment which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures without probable cause.

These car manufacturers are surpassing what anyone would consider a reasonable expectation of privacy. Governments, third-party advertisement companies, and insurance companies all have warrantless access to personal data, and drivers are largely unaware they are being spied on.

Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act permits the government to have backdoor access to this data.

The aforementioned senators’ concerns fell on deaf ears at the Federal Trade Commission. The Department of Transportation clearly is not listed within the US Constitution.

People are already experiencing stiff consequences from autos sharing data with the sharp uptick in insurance rates. Our freedom of movement is under attack. Our data has become more valuable than gold.

The legal implications fall under a grey area as the Founding Fathers never expected their newly created government to turn against their own citizens.

See more here Armstrongeconomics.com

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Comments (6)

  • Avatar

    solarsmurph

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    Wow, AI = Arrogant Invasion of privacy, Ads in Cars – anyone for Distracted Driving. All this from the Ministry of Truth – remember the Orson Well’s 1984, published in 1947. Good luck trying to buy a car without these so-called conveniences, or at least the ability to turn them off?

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Frank S.

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    So they no longer have to ask, “Have you driven a Ford, lately?” Now they know.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Howdy

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    Jamming device?

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Carmel

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    Smart means Spy
    Smart vehicles
    Smart phones
    Smart electronic devices
    Smart TV’s
    Smart electrical equipment
    Smart Meters

    Reply

  • Avatar

    VOWG

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    Now how many old people like me saw this coming decades ago? We tried to warn people but people always think they are smarter than those who are warning them.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    John V

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    One of the major delivery companies is going to partner with law enforcement to have cameras installed on their trucks and take pictures of license plates all day on their route and send that data to them.

    Reply

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