Carmakers are still putting diver data up for auction, and it's a practice that needs to be curbed, according to U.S. leaders.
On July 26, senators Ron Wyden (Oregon) and Edward J. Markey (Massachusetts) issued a letter to FTC chair Lina S. Khan, asking the regulatory leader to investigate the continued practice of car manufacturers collecting and then selling the driving data of its customers — which includes information like the exact time, distance, speed, and braking behavior of every auto trip. This data is then offered to insurance companies.
"Companies should not be selling Americans’ data without their consent, period. But it is particularly insulting for automakers that are selling cars for tens of thousands of dollars to then squeeze out a few additional pennies of profit with consumers’ private data," the senators write.
SEE ALSO: Apple Maps finally comes to the webThe letter names General Motors, Honda, and Hyundai, specifically, and their collaborations with data broker Verisk Analytics. It accuses Verisk of acting as a credit agency for drivers, and that companies were making deceptive claims to customers that data collection would lower their insurance costs. It also cites the use of "dark patterns" in opt-in programs.
In March, the New York Timesinvestigated an obscured practice of carmakers handing over the driving data of their cars' owners to data brokers like Verisk and LexisNexis, which would then be harvested to create individual risk scores for insurance providers — sending many drivers' insurance quotes sky high. Unlike opt-in insurance monitoring, the manufacturers collected data of internet-connected cars without notice. Carmakers offered little transparency of the practice, despite some, like Ford Motors, submitting patents for the technological practice of "collecting information directly from internet-connected vehicles" via advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS).
At the time, General Motors said it ended its partnership with LexisNexis, and Verisk said it ended a program that "scored drivers on their safe driving habits using data from internet-connected cars," but recent investigations suggest the practice continues.
"Senator Wyden’s office conducted follow-up oversight into three auto manufacturers — GM, Honda, and Hyundai — that shared data with the data broker Verisk Analytics," the letter reads. "Each of these three automakers confirmed their disclosure of drivers’ data to Verisk, such as acceleration and braking data. GM also confirmed that it disclosed customer location data to two other companies, which it refused to name.
"The FTC should hold accountable the automakers, which shared their customers’ data with data brokers without obtaining informed consent, as well as the data brokers, which resold data that had not been obtained in a lawful manner."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
U.S. Senators call on FTC to investigate the security of drivers' data-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
449
浏览
62
获赞
3
Google Doodle celebrates tactile paving inventor Seiichi Miyake
A new Google Doodle might cause you to appreciate what's under your feet.In a neat illustration on MDo Video Games Make You Violent? An In
Early last year, seventy French university students sat down in a room. A group of scientists told tLeaked JD Vance dossier has been blocked on Threads, Instagram, and Facebook
Meta has blocked the leaked JD Vance dossier on Threads, Instagram, and Facebook.According to a statKim Kardashian took the optimal 6,000 selfies on her Mexico vacation
Queen of Selfies Kim Kardashian-West has decreed that two selfies per minute is the korrect selfie fInside the online communities where straight guys help other straight guys get off
May is National Masturbation Month, and we're celebrating withFeeling Yourself, a series exploring tIf you see a pregnant Olivia Wilde on a subway, please offer her your seat
Olivia Wilde is very pregnant and will not stand for anyone's lack of common courtesy, thank you verHow to factory reset a PS4
Wondering how to factory reset a PS4? Sony's PlayStation 4 has been a trusty sidekick for over a decBest Roomba deal: Save $110 on Q011 robot vacuum on October Prime Day
SAVE $110:As of Oct. 9, the iRobot Roomba Q011 robot vacuum is on sale for $139.99 at Amazon. That'Bitcoin wipes coronavirus losses, passes $10,000 again
There's a popular meme that shows Bitcoin on a perpetual rollercoaster. It's true: The world's largeTeacher lowers grade for Native American students who sat during Pledge of Allegiance
Leilani Thomas's protest of the Pledge of Allegiance may be generating attention in light of similarAMD FSR 4 is Very Impressive: 1440p Upscaling Tested
AMD really needs FSR 4 to be great. Throughout the last two GPU generations, gamers have been abandoIrish government HQ bombarded with apples protesting Apple tax break
The offices of Ireland's ruling government party, Fine Gael, were littered with apples Wednesday, asFacebook launches 'Facebook Shops' for more in
Facebook just made it way easier to spend your money on Instagram. On Tuesday, Facebook, which ownsBest Amazon Music Unlimited deal: 4 months for free
TL;DR:A four-month subscription to Amazon Music Unlimited is available for £0, saving you &pouTrump campaign chair says there was 'no racism' before Obama
Kathy Miller, Donald Trump's campaign chair in Mahoning County, Ohio, resigned Thursday after contro