Driver facing camera in cars
from aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz to privacy@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 15:03
https://lemmy.ohaa.xyz/post/11773446

Hello people, my family recently bought a Renault 5 e-tech. The car itself is great, but there are some aspects that creep me out, especially the driver-facing camera. We didn’t actually know that such a camera existed before we bought the car, it was only mentioned as the car was given to us.

The cameras official purpose is to see, if you are tired and paying attention to the road, by some “AI magic”, I suppose. You can also let it scan your face, so that you automatically get logged into your profile.

I personally think, that that is kinda creepy, especially as there is no visual indication if the camera is currently recording and no official way to disable the camera hardware-wise. When it is being coverd, the car immediately complains about it.

When talking to friends or family about it, I got one of two reactions: equal concern, or “nice feature actually”, “what about the camera on your laptop?”, “you are way too paranoid”, “I have noting to hide; it is only me driving being recorded”.

I have also seen such cameras in other cars, BYD for example.

What do you think, is this creepy or am I too paranoid? Does anyone know where the actual data is processed, on device or on some cloud server? Do you have any experience with such cameras? I couldn’t really find any information about it on the internet.

The dashboard of an renault 5 e-tech. The camera mentioned in the post is in the A-pillar.

#privacy

threaded - newest

PennyRoyal@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 15:07 next collapse

I’d love to buy an electric car, but I want one with no electronics, if that makes sense. Electric power train, but no screens, “driver aids” or other nonsense

EmpatheticTeddyBear@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:10 next collapse

You want the Slate then

ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 15:34 next collapse

The Bezos-mobile

ToastedRavioli@midwest.social on 03 Jun 15:55 next collapse

Bezos has done a lot of horrible things, but making a $20k electric truck is not one of them.

I avoid shopping on Amazon unless absolutely necessary, maybe 2-3 times in the last ten years. I think his financial existence is an abomination. But if his truck company is the only manufacturer offering a $20k base vehicle then people have good reason to hand him money. Hopefully undercutting every other manufacturer by $10k+ will result in there being more cheap cars, and alternatives within that price range

anomnom@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 20:17 next collapse

I’ll believe it’s not $40k when they actually sell them.

It’s now “under $30k” since the tax break was nixed by Trump.

frunch@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 23:40 collapse

Maybe they’ll be cheaper but a swarm of scalpers will pocket the difference 🫠 maybe they’ll all get bought out as some sort of sacrificial lamb for AI to eat or something. Nothing good actually happens anymore, lol

Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 04 Jun 15:22 next collapse

Was it ever actually confirmed that Bezos was a prominent investor in that startup?

certified_expert@lemmy.world on 06 Jun 23:05 collapse

don’t worry, this is “casting the net” stage. The enshitification comes later.

timeghost@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 22:28 collapse

That and it used older, less safe battery tech.

s38b35M5@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:37 next collapse

Yes! I just heard of this recently. I hope it catches on.

TiredTiger@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 17:39 next collapse

Would love it if they were making a sedan or a subcompact. Not everyone needs or wants a truck.

ironhydroxide@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 18:04 collapse

Already out of production, but the original fiat 500e is very much one of these barebones electric vehicles. I love mine

Zetta@mander.xyz on 03 Jun 18:31 next collapse

They are going to be required to have the spyware cameras in 2027 as well. It’s federal law in the U.S. unfortunately. Hopefully there will be some published guides on tampering with and disabling them though.

LostCarcosan@lemmy.today on 03 Jun 19:35 collapse

Icepick or, less permanently, spray paint I suppose

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:43 collapse

Are you saying to use those tools on the car or the people forcing these fascist laws? Either way I’m for it.

xthexder@l.sw0.com on 03 Jun 20:37 next collapse

I actually want a 90s Civic hatchback with an EV swap

PennyRoyal@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 23:12 collapse

Not sure that it’ll be available this side of the Atlantic that soon, but it does seem pretty interesting

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 15:11 next collapse

YES! If you don’t need much range, maybe look the Renault Zoe from 2012. As its older it doesn’t seem to have that much tech in it.

ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 15:38 collapse

Be very much aware that these old Renault Zoe use chademo for fast charging, a connector that literally isn’t used anywhere anymore so you’re relegated to AC charging. Oh, and a funny little quirk with them; they cannot charge with less that 6KW AC because of how they use the motor inverter. sometimes with public AC chargers this is an issue due to load distribution between multiple chargers.

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 15:41 collapse

Oh, I just thought, that it just doesn’t do “fast charging”. Thank you for the heads-up!

p_consti@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:16 next collapse

Renault has some models with almost no gimmicks, only a typical navigation system, for example the Kangoo at least our older model, no idea if that changed)

s38b35M5@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:35 next collapse

No radio ability to connect to cell towers or WiFi would be nice. I think there’s a brand doing this, but I forgot to read that article I saw about it just a day or two ago.

Edit: here it is: arstechnica.com/…/slate-says-its-electric-pickup-…

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:40 collapse

That’s an Amazon owned company, their EVs won’t track you because they are already getting that data from your phones.

s38b35M5@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 17:14 collapse

Not my phone.

mindwanderer@feddit.org on 03 Jun 16:21 next collapse

buy an old car and convert it. It aint gonna be cheap but probably cheaper than a new EV.

ToastedRavioli@midwest.social on 03 Jun 19:13 next collapse

Converting an ICE car to an electric is insanely expensive. Far more expensive than buying a new electric car, even without factoring in the cost of buying the old car

mindwanderer@feddit.org on 03 Jun 19:38 collapse

where did you read that?

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:42 collapse

Look up the cost of conversion, then double that. It is very expensive to convert and then you get a car no one will touch for repairs. EV conversion companies are quite scammy.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 17:38 next collapse

I like the electronics, I just want anything that connects to the internet to be disabled. I’m close to needing to buy a new car, I plan on specifying at the dealership if they will stop me from disconnecting the GPS and other connections.

ApathyTree@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 18:48 next collapse

I have a 2023 chevy bolt and I just pulled the fuse for all that stuff. It doesn’t really disable anything important. If you still want navigation or location-based charging, you can remove the onstar module behind the screen without issue, and the video tutorial made it look pretty damned easy to DIY. That disables all the spyware/internet stuff but leaves everything else working. I’ll probably do it eventually, for location-based charging and nothing else, but its very low priority at the moment, cuz I hardly ever go anywhere that can use the full level 1 12amp pull (my friends and family aren’t confident their wiring can handle it, which is totally fair, I don’t use 12amp at home for the same reason, and I’m getting a new outlet installed that will make it a level 2 charger anyway)

It also has physical buttons for all the important stuff. That and being able to disable the spyware were my two main criteria, with cargo space as a close third (used to have a civic coupe, loved the size, but useless for moving stuff)

pishadoot@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 18:18 collapse

This will always be a game of cat and mouse, but I know that for example 3rd gen tacomas have a module that does all the talking (has the SIM card). You can pull a fuse and it kills it, but you lose your Bluetooth microphone also if you connect your phone and want to make calls - however it’s just a power passthrough so it’s really easy to splice a bypass cable that gives power back to the microphone in the cab.

There’s other stuff you can do, like disconnecting the antennas but supposedly if there’s a good enough cell signal the traces on the PCB will still transmit, I dunno.

Either way, there’s ways to get around a lot of the invasive stuff in modern vehicles but it gets harder every year.

Summzashi@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 18:51 collapse

Assuming you live in Europe, check out the citroen ec3. Base trim doesn’t even have infotainment and is affordable as hell. Still a great car to drive and very practical.

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:43 next collapse

Yep, I’ll never buy electric, becuase we aren’t allowed to have an analog one.

ELECTRIC IS SO FUCKING SIMPLE. motor. Battery. Voltage regulator. Gearbox. Thats it. That is all it fucking needs. But we can’t have that.

I think things need to start happening at dealerships. All those new cars just sitting outside unprotected. Hmm. Sure hope nothing happens to them. Do what it takes until we get what we want.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 00:40 next collapse

Thats it. That is all it fucking needs. But we can’t have that.

I share your pain.

I want an elec car. That is, if I could ahve one without spyware. Which I cannot, because enshittification.

Combustion cars are problematic in so many ways. But an older one is the only way I can avoid surveilance on wheels.

Think about what the mfg can glean from your car GPS! Or what they can infer and sell. You can figure some real intimate things about ppl that way. Give me your car GPS info. I will tell you where your kids go to school. I will tell you your economic class. Whether you just got cancer, b/c all the sudden your car is going to an oncologist office a lot. Whether you went to an abortion clinic last month. Whether you’re having an affair with a co-worker. It’s almost endless.

I’ve read claims that some car co’s now make more money from your data than from selling you the entire ass car.

This should scare the shit out of everybody. But it does not seem to.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:39 collapse

What is scary is how many lemmings don’t realize all that data is tracked on your phones. So driving some 30 year old shit box doesn’t prevent anything.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 16:33 collapse

Yeah, and even more, all the data that’s tracked by the car FROM your phone when you pair the phone and the car. Modern cars will scrape contacts, pictures, call logs, messages, locations, anything they can get off phones, and send it back to the car co as part of their profit-from-your-data ecosystem.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:37 collapse

Why are people convinced this is just in EVs? All new vehicles will have this, even brodozers.

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 16:12 collapse

I know, and it sucks.

Its becuase the old evs that didnt have this have awful range and generally suck. New evs would be god, but all new cars have this shit so I will never buy one.

SapphironZA@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 22:49 next collapse

You can probably do an hybrid conversion of a popular ICE vehicle.

The newest kits replace the transmission and adds a battery in the trunk. The engine is then converted to run at a fixed RPM for max efficiency. You can also plug them in to charge at home and on short trips they never even start the engine.

Aside form the lost Trunk space, there are very few downsides.

There really should be more investment in this area so it becomes available dor mor cars.

PennyRoyal@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 23:11 next collapse

That’s very much my thinking, the kits have come down in price a huge amount recently, so it’s almost achievable now

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 00:59 collapse

Any examples of such kits or estimates of the cost?

SapphironZA@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 01:07 collapse

5k to 8k depending on vehicle. Nothing mass manufactured yet. A lot of those products in the developing world. Lots of full electric conversion kits as well, but range is usually short to keep cost and size low.

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 01:30 collapse

Thanks!

Auli@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 01:04 collapse

Backup cameras are mandatory for a long time.

PennyRoyal@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 08:27 next collapse

I’ve fitted one into my old pickup, but again not worth the amount of complication that they generally come with, eg a massive screen in the dash and the canbus nonsense to go with it. I’d rather not have the level of canbus integration of modern cars, where a locking module or whatever failing can stop the whole car working

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:48 collapse

little by little they encroach… I got a car with a back up camera but no cell connection

kureta@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 15:08 next collapse

It is very creepy. Especially if there is no official way to disable the camera, so that it does not complain about the camera being disabled.

Rat_in_a_hat@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 15:10 next collapse

Check the privacy laws in your country. If in Europe, you can have the services disconnected. Looks like a Renault so sometimes cars manufactured in the EU will come built in with the ability to turn off the feature.

Car data privacy is the worst there is today and will get much worse with timd. Mozilla foundation put out a report recently

mozillafoundation.org/…/privacy-nightmare-on-whee…

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 15:15 collapse

Thank you, I’ll look into that :)

akilou@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 15:15 next collapse

Put a sticker over it

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 15:26 collapse

The car complains, when I do that. Maybe there is some way around that, but I haven’t found one

bran_buckler@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:31 next collapse

Maybe you could rig up something to have a small picture of yourself a few inches away from it

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 15:36 next collapse

Haha, great idea

altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 19:28 collapse

It depends. IIRC some laptops that come with face unlock feature use dual IR cameras to confirm the face is not a flat picture with a bonus of being indifferent to darkness. They need a staring minifig!

LemmyFeed@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 17:00 collapse

Return the car. Complain to the dealership that the car complains when you cover the camera.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 01:04 collapse

In my fantasy world, every single person who buys one does exactly that.

Then the car co either goes tits up, or it stops loading the vehicle full of spyware.

Same for smart TVs.

ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 15:17 next collapse

Driver awareness systems A.K.A. driver-facing cameras have been a thing for quite some time now, and they do in fact serve a legitimate safety purpose which is detecting if you’re falling a sleep or distracted from looking at the road. If you’re in the EU these systems are mandatory which is also why the car complains when the cameras are covered.

Unfortunately these systems can also be exploited for nefarious tracking purposes without any real way to know for sure.

Edit: they don’t use any “AI” for the detection AFAIK, just regular old ML (which maybe labelled AI for marketing purposes though).

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 15:23 next collapse

Thank you for the context! Interestingly, I can disable the system in settings, so Renault should be able to let me cover it or provide a cover

ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 15:30 collapse

Legislation can sometimes be a bit weird, so they might not actually be allowed to let you cover the camera despite allowing you to disable the system in settings. Most likely this system is restored to default enabled state every time the car “starts” because this is often a requirement for safety systems that can be disabled.

valar@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 15:48 next collapse

If you’re in the EU these systems are mandatory which is also why the car complains when the cameras are covered.

Mind-boggling if true. There’s no way I would own such a car.

ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 16:17 collapse

I mean, there is a fairly good argument to be made for safety features that actually increase road safety. The tech and legislation requiring it is not bad, it’s the unnecessary data-hoovering that can go on top of it that’s bad. This is where we sort of rely on GDPR to provide at least some guard rails, although it isn’t currently enough.

valar@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 16:30 collapse

I’m sure it does save lives. That does not justify invading everyone’s privacy with a video wiretap in every car. As you and another commenter pointed out, it would be fine if it was self contained and we could trust the car wasn’t radioing to various corporations and governments. But we know for a fact that they are. As long as the car is able to transmit that data out of my control, I don’t trust GDPR to protect me from being spied on with this camera.

grey_maniac@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 19:21 collapse

I wonder difficult it would be to design an image of an alert driver you could tape over, or suspend in front of this camera. I remember people I knew who had breathalyzer locks on their cars would get a sober person to blow in it for them. Mislead the spytech.

pHr34kY@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:20 next collapse

  • Camera
  • Internet connectivity
  • Proprietary software

No device should have more than two of these things.

grue@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 16:17 next collapse

No device should have the third, ever.

pHr34kY@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 23:16 collapse

I have an offline dashcam and it’s fine. It does everything I need it to, and does nothing I don’t want it to. It can’t connect to the internet so it can’t spy on me if it wanted to.

grue@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 23:48 collapse

Maybe there’s room for compromise, but there is absolutely zero reason to concede such things in advance. The baseline expectation is that every device should be running Free Software and fully respect its owner’s property rights, full stop.

If you instead approach the issue with the casual attitude that “oh, proprietary isn’t so bad if it doesn’t connect to the internet” the compromise after negotiations ends up favoring proprietary tyrants way more than you would’ve been okay with.

deathmetaldawgy@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 17:09 next collapse

I don’t see why a vehicle needs to connect to the internet at all. Or have a screen whatsoever. I don’t understand why a car can’t just be a thing with a gear shift and a fucking steering wheel that drives from point A to point B

We’re being sold this idea of a car being like, a mobile family home or comfort space away from home. But the thing is, cars before 2015-ish were actually kinda comfy. Now they look and feel like robots. Kinda sickening. They all look so fucking ugly too every car is the same ugly round van/SUV shape now.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 17:35 next collapse

wherever there’s money to be made, capitalism will inevitably enshitify it and there’s A LOT of money to be had by cars with cameras and sensors that record your habits to report them to insurance industry to charge the maximum possible fees and to the police to keep track of your whereabouts.

making cars comfy and convenient (as well has making it the only viable means for travel) is the way people get lured into this mobile panopticon by choice and they pay for the privilege to do so.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 03 Jun 23:18 next collapse

I don’t see why a vehicle needs to connect to the internet at all.

Remote start (ICE) or remote starting heater (EV, ICE with Webasto) is a nice feature. Ability to check the status of your doors (are they locked), windows (maybe you left them open because it was hot and then the rain sensor didn’t close them), etc. All great features. Ability to track it is great if you have kids and let them drive, I guess - mine isn’t that old yet.

It would be much nicer if you could route all of that to your HA server instead of the manufacturer’s server though.

But the thing is, cars before 2015-ish were actually kinda comfy.

Is why I keep driving utterly depreciated formerly executive/luxury shitboxes! Okay, I had one 2019 Mercedes, best car I’ve ever owned, other than the privacy issues. But you can get 90% of the actual physical car features that car offered in a car manufactured before they started connecting 'em to the internet. Would only be missing the 9G-Tronic transmission and the super efficient engine that made it feel like I was driving for free.

Now my dream car is a 2010-2012 Range Rover (L322). First of the ones with the good 4.4 diesel engine and the extremely good ZF 8 speed transmission. Last of the ones with the sexy boxy body shape. Connectivity? GPS, radio, bluetooth (only for calls). No internet. Price? About 10-15k EUR for a decent one. Good luck finding a brand new car for less than 100k with the same comfort level and towing capacity. Maintenance costs? OK if you know how to wrench, literal bankruptcy material if you don’t.

deathmetaldawgy@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 16:31 collapse

Remote start (ICE) or remote starting heater (EV, ICE with Webasto) is a nice feature. Ability to check the status of your doors (are they locked), windows (maybe you left them open because it was hot and then the rain sensor didn’t close them), etc.

I can do all of this myself with my eyes and my hands, I live in a place where I don’t lock my car really ever unless I go to the big cities. Like I detest the idea of having an app for my car to tell me the automatic window thing you’re talking about didn’t do it. I am perfectly capable of doing that myself with my own 2 hands, I’ve forgotten before in the rain and it hasn’t ever been so big of a deal that I’d opt for a feature to do that for me, it’s the definition of unnecessary. Remote start seems nice especially in the brutal winters but I’ve never had it before and I’ve never had any problems waking up before sunrise in below 0 weather to start my car other than battery issues. I also don’t see why remote start and heated seats would require internet or an app whatsoever.

It would be much nicer if you could route all of that to your HA server instead of the manufacturer’s server though.

I literally have no idea what this means and zero interest in learning anything more about software or hardware, I do admit that’s probably kindof ignorant of me but I also do not like “computer stuff” like that, I have an iPhone because I want it to 100% simple as possible like I’m a boomer.

I just want a god damn car I can start with my hands and drive where I need to go safely and efficiently. That’s it. I don’t understand why people enjoy having so many more unnecessary bells and whistles.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 04 Jun 18:39 collapse

Good for you then. Where I live, it can be 35 degrees and sunshine and then suddenly torrential rain half an hour later. You’d want to be able to make sure the window is closed when it starts raining. How do you do that if you can’t get to the car at the moment?

0 degree weather doesn’t really warrant pre-heating your car either. Try running out the moment you wake up in nothing but a t-shirt and maybe pants when it’s -30 or colder to get the car. Bonus points if you live on the 5th floor and have to run down, then up to go have breakfast and then back down. Then tell me you see no value in being able to do this remotely.

Though if you use an iPhone, I don’t really see why you care about having a non-connected car anyway. Your phone already reports where you are at all times.

deathmetaldawgy@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 20:18 collapse

Try running out the moment you wake up in nothing but a t-shirt and maybe pants when it’s -30 or colder to get the car.

lol. I own winter coats for a reason… You throw that on instead of a t shirt in -30 mornings. We get those here too. Just going out in a t shirt is your own fault. I would also never work somewhere I couldn’t run outside quick to roll up my windows. I always work labor so I’ve never ever been told I’d have to just sit inside if I knew my car was being rained on. These problems aren’t real problems being solved they’re laziness. Telling me you don’t take the time to put a coat on in the winter is fucking insane no wonder you need your car to connect to WiFi and track you!

I don’t care about my phone tracking me tbh.

I care about it being easy and efficient to use, that’s my whole point about cars.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 04 Jun 21:05 collapse

I’m not going to bother getting dressed just to go start the car lol. I own a winter coat too, I rarely use it because I don’t need it when it’s warmer than about -30. I go out in my shorts and t-shirt and then get dressed when it’s actually time to leave.

Anyway, all of these things make using your car easier and more efficient. Not having to spend extra time doing things manually. But like I said, if you don’t care about your phone tracking you, why give a shit about the car? It has far less data, it can’t even access your bank accounts or email.

I bet you don’t drive a car with manually adjustable valves either. Why? Are you lazy? Or is it that technology takes care of things you don’t want to spend time doing? Matter of fact, why not walk or cycle to work? It’s all laziness in the end.

deathmetaldawgy@lemmy.ml on 05 Jun 16:07 collapse

There’s a certain level of laziness that I am willing to sacrifice for comfort/efficency, and then there’s the level of work that I enjoy putting in to my daily routine. Now I’m just worried for you as a fellow winter enjoyer… put on a coat and some gloves dude! You can get frostbite! It is 100% worth it, you already have to put on atleast underwear (you owe that to your neighbors if they can see you like mine could) and shoes! Please don’t tell me you skip putting on shoes too…

As far as the data thing goes I would be willfully ignorant if the cars actually reflected what I wanted to do with them, if that makes sense. I don’t need it to connect to an app on my phone because that personally annoys me, that’s kinda it. Same with driver facing cameras, fancy screens that are distracting, etc, it’s mostly that they personally annoy me and I don’t personally like the features and I wish there were options to have a simple car with a simple, physical interface.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 05 Jun 21:21 collapse

The thing is, these are nearly always voluntary features. Just because you gain the ability to check lock status and lock the doors from your phone doesn’t mean you lose the lock button on the fob. Teslas are just about the only exception there lol

As for the coat thing, I don’t do it because I’m accustomed to it, I used to lie in snow piles in jeans and a t-shirt as a teen.

But the annoying part is having to run downstairs, put on shoes, etc. My car takes about half an hour of running the engine to get the ice off the windscreen and the cabin warm enough for my toddler (did you know that thick coats or onesies are bad for safety while driving? I did not, but my ex does and she’s the kind of person to tell CPS I’m not keeping our child safe enough.) On an average winter morning that means I should be out of the door and starting the car the minute after I wake up. Kindergarten mornings are not fun in the winter. Difficult enough to wake up when it’s pitch black outside.

But anyway, the reason I’m now looking at those old Range Rogers besides some of the comfiest seats in the world is that they have a preheater as standard equipment on diesels for those years so I can either program a schedule or use the remote if equipped, which works for me since I currently live in a detached home not the nth floor of a large commie block where signal might be an issue. I don’t think my neighbours like me idling the car for half an hour on a cold morning either, the preheater is much quieter and uses less fuel so there’s less exhaust gas too. Plus I get to start the engine when it’s already warm, rather than worrying about whether my timing chain will make it through the winter.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:46 collapse

Can’t steal a Tesla. Once stolen, it cannot be used.

deathmetaldawgy@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 16:34 collapse

I mean, that’s great and all but I’ve never really had a problem with my cars being stolen more so with them becoming more expensive and less efficient not to mention ugly as sin, Tesla is a perfect example. Those cars look like corporate sanitation personified.

Dr_Vindaloo@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 19:36 collapse

Love it, I’ll be stealing this comment thanks.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:27 next collapse

I will never buy a car made after 2018.

noodles@slrpnk.net on 03 Jun 16:36 next collapse

Curious why that year? You have to go much older to predate any surveillance tech. Like some cars in the 90s had GPSs embedded, not sure when the ability to offload data arose but no later than 2007 in OnStar equiped vehicles.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 17:14 collapse

That year and earlier had way less tracking and also have cars I actually want.

For example, my 2015 car has no connectivity because the cell modem is too old. And it’s a station wagon, which nobody makes anymore.

hemko@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 18:07 next collapse

My 2019 Kia is pretty stripped from “smart” features 🤷‍♂️

crunchpaste@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 22:17 collapse

I got a 2020 mustang and it even more basic in terms of tech than my previous car, a 1999 bmw.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 22:22 collapse

Damn, a 99 Mustang must be riveted together with tractor parts

Kongar@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 15:27 next collapse

You’re not being paranoid - that would be a hard “no” for me. I’d keep a clunker from the 70’s alive and drive that forever.

sicsadworld@hexbear.net on 03 Jun 18:04 collapse

They will stop making parts… it is already happening. I am sorry to be the bearer of bad news.

MercuryGenisus@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:29 next collapse

All this would be fine if, and only if you actually owned your car and all the data in it. If you could assume no cell phone somewhere hidden away in the computer. If the data was encrypted with a key you had, not the dealer, not the police, just you.

But we all know that isn’t the case. You might have a title to your car, and own almost nothing inside it. Everything is connected these days, which means someone is looking at that data and seeing dollar signs.

ricecake@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 15:32 next collapse

Fatigue detection is a real thing that doesn’t use the type of AI that people think of when they hear that word today most often. It’s not language based but instead it’s able to recognize faces and posture, tell where your attention is focused, and recognize signs of fatigue like head drop, eyes closing, and attention drifting from the road.
It, along with other attention based driver safety features, are real and effective and can be done on device with a computer with less power than a modern cellphone.

It is, however, at least a little creepy. It’s made a lot more so by it not being disclosed upfront with disclosures and full user awareness. It should be explained by both the website, the car manual, the salesperson and the car itself exactly what it’s doing and where any video data is being sent. It’s probably processing the video locally and at most sending telemetry about which driver just sat down and such, but 1) you might not want that 2) unless they actually tell you that you don’t know.

It’s not paranoia to want an explanation and appropriate assurances, or for it to be in your control. You don’t need to assume it’s the worst case for that to be true. It’s probably a real safety feature with a couple of quality of life features taped on so people can see it do something, since you don’t really see a passive safety feature. But without actual communication you don’t actually know that.

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 15:39 next collapse

Thank you for the excellent response!

iByteABit@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 17:43 next collapse

I see the safety benefits of having this, and I would appreciate knowing that the car would blast a loud sound every time my eyes shut off from sleepiness so it will never happen, but this must be 100% open source no exceptions so it can be verified that it doesn’t spy on you.

ricecake@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 18:04 collapse

Yeah, I can see the safety benefits but I’m honestly not sure how I would feel about it. My current car has a variant but the camera is mounted on the outside, and it notices lane drift and changes in responsiveness to curves. It’s basically an extension of the collision/lane centering/automatic windshield wiper (weirdly) systems.

I’m okay with that because it’s not looking at me, but at the road, which I expect the car to do. Even if it was verified to not be sending anything anywhere I can honestly say I’m still very unsure about just being passively on camera like that.

atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:20 next collapse

There are at least two cars owned by members of my family that I am aware of that have a fatigue detection, and neither of them use cameras. So I’m firmly in the creepy camp.

ricecake@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 23:31 collapse

That’s pretty fair. I know the cameras can be more effective, particularly in situations where the driver may be using lane centering or something, but I’m not sure I could be fully comfortable regardless.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 19:37 collapse

don’t need to assume it’s the worst case

We are all assuming the worst case because it’s most likely based on historical data. There is no way to justify this while ignoring other actual safety issues like headlights. Pretty sure not being blind while driving is an actual issue, but since it doesn’t rape privacy and civil rights, they’ll just ignore that.

ricecake@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 21:00 collapse

You’re literally quoting a part of a sentence to seemingly disagree with. Specifically a sentence that’s saying that you don’t need to believe it’s nefarious for it to be reasonable to want privacy and assurances of privacy.

They seemed on the fence about if they were being paranoid or if they were justified in feeling concerned and it was as bad as it seemed.
I’m saying it doesn’t matter what you believe their intentions are, it’s not paranoid to have concerns about the camera in your face. You can short circuit questions about the technology or their reputation and go directly to resolving that discomfort however is most suitable to you.

Eat_Your_Paisley@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:35 next collapse

All if this is why my next car with be from the pre-computer era

ignotum@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:41 next collapse

So your next car will be from 1940 or older?

Eat_Your_Paisley@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:45 collapse

Computers didn’t make their way into cars until the late 70’s, my next car will predate that.

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 17:02 next collapse

I’m still driving a 2001. Lol.

Eat_Your_Paisley@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 17:24 collapse

My VW is a 2019.

To be fair though my next car was always going to be an air cooled Porsche, I’ve wanted one my whole life and I’m not getting any younger. Lately though I’ve been eyeing some cal look beetles on the various platforms so the mental math is happening

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:49 collapse

Late 90s to early 2000s was peak car. All downhill after that. Like everything really.

Zephorah@discuss.online on 03 Jun 15:39 next collapse

Loyal Moses has a vid on these cameras re Ford patenting tech that won’t let you start the car if your mood is deemed incompatible with driving.

Whatever the case re drive ability, 100% your insurance company will have this data.

Does the car stop complaining if you cover it or is it a constant ear assault? Can you start the car if it’s covered? Is there a workaround to disable it?

ETA: what’s weird is that your parents aren’t aware that most people cover laptop cameras. I’m parent aged, and I do. Many laptops come equipped with a slider device to cover it.

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 15:49 next collapse

I only tried to cover it for a short time, as my parents are really opposed to the idea of covering it. Maybe I’ll design and 3d print a removable cover. I think the laptop camera argument was a little short-sighted; I also pointed that out to them 😅

brygphilomena@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 16:31 next collapse

Hell, that would motivate me to design a whole new plastic cover for the a pillar and remove the cameras entirely.

Bluegrass_Addict@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 16:34 next collapse

I fold paper over the front, or put electrical tape. don’t need or want the thing.

Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 23:11 collapse

The laptop I have now has its own camera cover, but when I had a laptop that didn’t have it, I was able to buy little slider stickers to put over it. I don’t want to link any particular website, but if you look up “laptop camera slider sticker” you can easily find them.

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 17:02 collapse

Most people do not cover laptop cameras, but many do.

Zephorah@discuss.online on 03 Jun 23:16 collapse

It was integrated into my last two cases. Maybe it’s a Lenovo thing.

System 76 came in a shitty, basic case. Feels almost fragile after Lenovo. And no slider. (I like the computer guts, but for that price the case shouldn’t feel like you could break something by simply lifting it while open.)

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 23:19 collapse

that was my experience w system76 as well; mac price tag w clevo build quality. only its support make it worthwhile.

Zephorah@discuss.online on 03 Jun 23:22 collapse

For that price they can give it a durable case. It feels like driving around with car bumpers made of glass.

dieTasse@feddit.org on 03 Jun 16:04 next collapse

You are not paranoid insideevs.com/…/tesla-employees-shared-invasive-v…

catdog@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 19:55 collapse

CARINT is becoming a thing as well (car intelligence), next to the ore existing disciples if HUMINT, SIGINT etc.

And my own government is the least of my worries. Between CRINK, fallen allies, and megacorps.

spacehulk@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 16:23 next collapse

This is being touted for safety reasons, yet there are still no guidelines and headlight brightness, headlight height, hood height of pickup trucks, etc. Regulate the vehicle exterior for actual and immediate safety benefits before trying to float this privacy infringing shit.

FatVegan@leminal.space on 03 Jun 17:37 next collapse

Car regulations are so much fun. Atere you crazy? Your car can’t be that loud, there are several reasons for it, obviously. Oh wait, you mean a rich people car? Nevermind, those can be the loudest cars imaginable, because they need 900 hp

Summzashi@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 18:53 collapse

There are in Europe. Which is also where this car is from.

mindwanderer@feddit.org on 03 Jun 16:25 next collapse

Cars collect data about you to sell them to insurance companies. There was a study by the mozilla foundation about this and they said that there is basicly no modern car that does not do that.

The only thing you can do to avoid them is buy an old car.

Bluegrass_Addict@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 16:32 next collapse

or use electrical tape on the cameras…

mindwanderer@feddit.org on 03 Jun 16:40 next collapse

and if they realise that and disable the car until you remove it?

Bluegrass_Addict@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 16:43 collapse

🔥

scrion@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 17:50 next collapse

Additional data about your driving behavior is also collected, completely unrelated to cameras. In fact, this data is the majority.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:59 collapse

Maybe people who drive like cunts endangering the public need to be watched.

scrion@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 16:43 collapse

I don’t think invasive data collection via black boxes is the way to go. I’d say better driver education, speed traps, and better education for civil servants (such as traffic cops) might be a better solution.

douglasg14b@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 19:45 next collapse

It’s a lot more than just video. It’s all your audio while you’re in the car. Your driving habits, your location, your devices, who is in the car with you so on and so forth.

There’s a ton of data that can be gathered and associated without having to have a camera.

If you ever talk in your car and it’s a modern car. Congratulations! That’s being recorded cataloged and sold off to the highest bidder.

Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 23:06 next collapse

I hope they like me talking to myself in funny voices and belting out songs at the top of my lungs, because that’s all the audio they’ll get out of me.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:59 collapse

I read out my world domination manifesto when I go out for a loaf of bread. Because I know a group of people in a room in China know how important I am.

Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 22:45 collapse

One doesn’t have to be internationally important to not want their audio recorded in their own private space.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:57 collapse

Oh yes, because you are so critical there are committees in China listening to your every conversation, or aliens, or those lizard democrats.

douglasg14b@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 05:55 collapse

… What?

Are you drinking your grandma’s bath water again?

RampantParanoia2365@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 21:23 collapse

Reread this post.

Buddahriffic@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 18:11 next collapse

There was an article about removing the modem (or other essential piece of that data path) from a specific model of car (prius I think?), hoping to see more of those.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 00:46 next collapse

Yeah I want an entire ass web database with how to do that for every car. Spin up the hw hacker community on that shit.

I haven’t found a centralized place for it though. Just some piecemeal info. Moz has a good centralized db for what info different cars collect. But nobody seem to have one for how to disable it, per make and model.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:55 collapse

Find the antenna, wrap in foil. It’s not rocket appliances, Ricky.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:54 collapse

Many models can disable data sharing in options. Kia is one example.

Many models require the owner to fit a SIM card if they want OTA.

The amount of paranoid misinformation in this thread is annoying.

Y’all don’t want a nanny state? Then stop driving drunk, stoned, texting or otherwise distracted and killing over 30,000 people a year like children. We need this shit because we give morons licences to drive, and we refuse to force telcos to disable data IO on phones while driving.

orbituary@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 16:29 next collapse

Wow. Your usage of commas is unique.

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 17:01 collapse

Whoops, german writing instincts strike again 🥸

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 16:32 next collapse

Moz’s landing page about car privacy.

Depends on the car ofc, but the worst ones not only send video from inside the car to the company, they send data from outside the car! Like people walking around and stuff.

Reuters says:

Some of the recordings caught Tesla customers, opens new tab in embarrassing situations. One ex-employee described a video of a man approaching a vehicle completely naked. Also shared: crashes and road-rage incidents. One crash video in 2021 showed a Tesla driving at high speed in a residential area hitting a child riding a bike, according to another ex-employee. The child flew in one direction, the bike in another. The video spread around a Tesla office in San Mateo, California, via private one-on-one chats, “like wildfire,” the ex-employee said.

Other images were more mundane, such as pictures of dogs and funny road signs that employees made into memes by embellishing them with amusing captions or commentary, before posting them in private group chats.

“We could see inside people’s garages and their private properties,” said another former employee. “Let’s say that a Tesla customer had something in their garage that was distinctive, you know, people would post those kinds of things.”

Lots more troubling shit at the link. Tesla’s probably close tot he worst, but most modern cars are like all the privacy clusterfuck of phones… but worse.

EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 16:34 next collapse

These will be required in all cars sold in the US as soon as next year and close to zero people are talking about.

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:47 collapse

The bought and paid for media really have it under wraps.

Nothing we can do anyway. Except dont buy new cars. And those of us who care about this arent buying new cars. Rich folk will continue doing it. Businesses will have zero issue with it.

This will continue until old cars are illegal, and there will be an underground mafia of sorts to cull all of the spare parts suppliers so you will not be able to fix them. There will be a black market for car parts for those brave enough to dare drive a non spyware car. They will be jailed for it. Mark my words, this is their plan.

desmosthenes@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 16:47 next collapse

hell no

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 17:00 next collapse

This is one of those great ideas which can easily be implemented offline but they make it require phoning their data collection unit. Fuck everything about that. I would have stopped and said uhhh no. I want my money back.

WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:08 collapse

does not matter if it can be online, because it is part of an opaque system where its not possible to verify they are telling the truth

JoMiran@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 17:11 next collapse

I always bring up the magic of Scotch’s Magic Tape.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcdn.schoolspecialty.com%2Fda79aae4-c3fb-4e2f-8136-b0f00113197d%2F040560_JPG%2520Output.jpg%3Fwidth%3D700%26height%3D700%26fit%3Dbounds%26canvas%3D700%252C700%26bg-color%3Dffffff">

This tape lets most of the light through (useful for dynamic light features) while blurring the image as if out of focus or behind frosted glass. It is also mostly discrete unlike opaque tapes.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 17:44 next collapse

the locations of the cameras are no published and you’re likely to miss at least one.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 17:50 collapse

For that we still have the Internet. Better nerds than I will find out for each car model where each last camera is located

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 19:50 collapse

yes, thankfully; but only for now and even then, they permanently have the advantage in this cat-and-mouse game.

driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br on 03 Jun 17:52 collapse

The car potentially can refuse to run because can’t validate that the driver is not impaired to drive.

MyVeryRealName@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 19:55 collapse

That’s not the car’s responsibility

Trilogy3452@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 20:15 next collapse

I think the US government thinks it is, IIRC there’s an upcoming regulation in 2027 for that

MyVeryRealName@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 20:21 collapse

The libertarians are finally starting to make sense.

BarrelAgedBoredom@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 21:59 next collapse

Want the good bits of “libertarianism” with internal consistency and a liberatory framework? Have I got the ideology for you!

MyVeryRealName@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 22:03 collapse

Anarchism might be a bit too extreme for my taste

BarrelAgedBoredom@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 22:14 collapse

Its not that extreme when you look into it, but I get it. Anarchism has a lot of negative connotations, but It’s fundamentally an acknowledgement that hierarchy is the common thread that connects all oppressive structures (capitalism, racism, patriarchy, homophobia, transphobia, nationalism, the state, etc). As such, if we want to be free from oppression we should be dismantling hierarchies by whatever means necessary, so long as those means are compatible with our ends. This could look like the anarchist of days past, sabotaging factories, killing union busters, and assassinating kings. But it also looks like starting community gardens, running food shares, setting up free stores, tool libraries, and time banks. There’s a million ways to be an anarchist, and very few of them involve bombs

MyVeryRealName@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 22:21 collapse

While I oppose all oppressive structures mentioned, how is hierarchy inherently oppressive?

Also, I definitely support serving the community through actions such as those you mentioned.

Gold_E_Lox@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 23:47 collapse

most hierarchies are not consensual.

MyVeryRealName@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 06:55 next collapse

Is it fair for me to expect companies or political parties to be non hierarchical?

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 14:35 collapse

I’ve been trying to think of a consensual hierarchy, and came up completely empty on that.

rumba@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 22:41 next collapse

Yeah that’s the problem, they make just enough sense that you can squint at it and think they’re fine. I have a number of relatively intelligent acquaintances that are full on libertarian without having any idea it’s a political pyramid scheme until you start having them dissect it and explain the parts on who gets to decide what gets pair for.

bold_atlas@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 23:36 next collapse

Libertarians would only care if the industry said they didn’t want it. But manufacturers are all lock step in favor of these regulations.

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 00:57 collapse

Exactly. The big manufacturers love stuff like this. The more mandatory features, the harder it is for new car manufacturers to enter the market. Back in the day, guys like Ford started out by selling cars they built out of their garages. Ford was built by starting in a garage and plowing the profits back into the business over decades. But modern cars are just too complex to build that way.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:45 collapse

You have no idea how the industry works. Everything like this is modular from suppliers and adding gadgets is trivial, which is why they all do it.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:44 collapse

Drinking and driving is about freedom. My body, my choice, etc.

MyVeryRealName@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 19:57 collapse

And we’re back

Auli@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 23:17 next collapse

I mean it is if the government wants it to be. Same as putting the breathalyzers in someone’s car.

marsupial9272@quokk.au on 04 Jun 02:42 collapse

I mean, cars aren’t sentient so, this should be a given since they can’t have responsibility assigned to them. But here we are.

stoicEuropean@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 17:15 next collapse

This is creepy as hell. I liked the Renault 5 - until now. Fuck this shit. I wont pay a small fortune, just to enslave myself to a 1984-style digital panopticon. I am getting angry just by reading your story. Corporate greed is once again crossing the line, slowly shifting the overtone window. Everyone who is not concerned about this, is simply ignorant and/or borderline stupid.

If it was my car, I’d probably cover it. And if it then starts beeping, I’d maybe even locate the speaker and deactivate that one, too.

I wonder if it is even legal to sell you something like this without informing you prior to your purchase.

atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:33 next collapse

Not sure if autocorrect or boneappletea but *Overton Window.

HAL_9_TRILLION@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 19:47 next collapse

To me your comment brings to mind the underlying problem, which is: your action won’t matter because of the overwhelming behavior of the herd. The masses can’t comprehend/don’t care and profitability is absolutely not tied to consumer satisfaction anymore.

The only winning move is not to play. Buy older models before this idiocy started. My vehicle is 2011 my SO’s is 2007.

This is all just to increase the profit margins for insurance.

RhondaSandTits@lemmy.sdf.org on 03 Jun 21:15 next collapse

I liked the Renault 5 - until now. Fuck this shit

Same.
I was so pumped when I first heard about this electric model, but now that’s ruined.

What an amazing way to trash a decades long cult following.

JamesBoeing737MAX@sopuli.xyz on 03 Jun 22:52 next collapse

This is not as much of a problem as the android apps and the internet connectivity of everything.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:49 collapse

Calm down. If you can afford a new car, you can afford a roll of electrical tape.

JFC lemmings love their drama. If only you showed this much passion at elections.

MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 17:29 next collapse

Add a sticker with a face on it?

sicsadworld@hexbear.net on 03 Jun 18:02 next collapse

I just put electrical tape on the IR sensors. This reminds me of

<img alt="altr" src="https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/6e69e061-d6a1-40a6-b27b-70a8558a4ef7.gif">

toebert@piefed.social on 03 Jun 17:50 next collapse

We got a modern BYD recently as a rental on a holiday that had this, it was really annoying. Anytime anything happened the car beeped, it was near constant different beeps - super distracting. Most of the things could be turned off, but had to be turned off each time the car was started, on a tablet buried in various menus.

The attention thing also wasn’t working great with the driver wearing sunglasses, it’d randomly start complaining. It also complained when the driver would lean forward to get a better view around a corner or anything.

It was a very fancy car, but I’d definitely never choose a car with these features, even though some may probably be useful.

I’d also never trust one of these companies not to change the policy on what they can do with this camera in the future, at which point you’ll have little to no choice about it. Or, to find out they messed up and now anyone can watch you in your car.

I’d go back to the dealership and complain, either ask for a refund or a way to be able to cover the camera, especially if they only disclosed it as you got the car.

Summzashi@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 18:49 collapse

One thing the Renault does great is the ability to turn all those systems off with a dedicated button to the left of the steering wheel.

Unfortunately all these systems are mandatory for car manufacturers these days. Renault handels it about as well as a car maker can to be honest.

toebert@piefed.social on 03 Jun 19:53 collapse

That’s interesting. OP implied they can’t be disabled but now I see it was specifically hardware vise.

Does the car still complain if the camera is covered when these are disabled?

Summzashi@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 20:39 collapse

I was very interested in this car and tested it for about a week, the first thing I did was put a piece of black tape over the sensor. It does not complain, it doesn’t notice.

If the systems are enabled, it warns you that it doesn’t work, which is every time you start the car until you press the button.

I have no idea what kind of data this car gathers but out of all the cars I’ve shopped for lately this one was definitely the least intrusive of them all. The fact that this car in particular shows up in this sub is kinda wild to me.

I didn’t end up getting it because the trim levels are weird.

toebert@piefed.social on 03 Jun 21:08 collapse

Thank you, that’s very useful to know.

MeetMeAtTheMovies@hexbear.net on 03 Jun 18:11 next collapse

Reminder that people with ADHD are regularly falsely flagged as not paying attention by eye tracking software. This camera shit is not only creepy and invasive. It likely doesn’t work well and has an ableist bias.

isame@hexbear.net on 03 Jun 18:34 next collapse

Wait really? My work truck uses Samsara, and it alerts me for not paying attention while I’m looking at the road at least once a week.

LeeeroooyJeeenkiiins@hexbear.net on 03 Jun 22:53 collapse

Oh it turns out the rapid scanning of what’s in front of me to look out for and avoid threats while heavily relying on sensing changes in my peripheral vision i.e. to keep distance with the car in front of me isn’t just a weird thing that I do because I’m built different, it’s an ADHD thing (i’d also do this when working retail doing online orders to run around the store and not run into people)

maybe i really do have adhd and that time i was like “hey doctor i can’t read so good no more” and he threw adderall at me he wasn’t being medically irresponsible and my adhd was just so apparent that’s all it took

astropenguin5@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 18:31 next collapse

Yep, creepy, and point about the laptop camera is often invalid because depending on the model some laptops have a hardwired switch or cover for exactly this reason. Also usually have a light to tell you it’s on, and aren’t constantly in use.

usualsuspect191@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 18:35 collapse

And they don’t pester you if you cover the camera either, and you have more control on whether they’re online too.

Professorozone@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 19:10 next collapse

I’d sell the car.

xthexder@l.sw0.com on 03 Jun 20:30 collapse

I don’t know about the laws over there, but in the US you’d legally be able to return the car if this camera is a deal breaker and it was not disclosed before purchase.

Professorozone@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 05:17 collapse

It depends on the location and the dealership. I owned a Mustang GT for three days once. The dealership offered a 3 day return policy for any reason.

I thought they would put me through hell to return it but to their credit, they didn’t.

Professorozone@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 19:11 next collapse

I’m guessing there’s a microphone as well? Most cars have then now.

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 03 Jun 22:11 collapse

Yes, the infotainment system even shows is as being constantly used, which I could disable by going through the android app list (infotainment is based on android) and disabling the built-in AI assistant

mctoasterson@reddthat.com on 03 Jun 19:26 next collapse

I believe this is (or will soon be) a regulatory requirement in many countries, for self-driving features in modern cars.

For me I don’t do long highway trips often enough to justify having it. I would rather not have inherently invasive blackbox tech as a tradeoff for a feature I will seldom (if ever) use.

Malyca@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 19:29 next collapse

It’s absolutely creepy.

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:39 next collapse

Need to be smashing them. Call up the dealer and scream at them. Do not buy new cars.

Still can’t believe we allowed this to happen. Well, I’ll be repairing old cars till I die I guess.

aldo@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 15:07 next collapse

It’s creepy even if it has a legitimate purpose. There’s a move to make this kind of tech mandatory in all cars, with the purported aim of stopping drunk driving. yahoo.com/…/federal-surveillance-tech-becomes-man…

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 19:49 collapse

Surveillance is always under the guise of “protect the children” from the same government who rapes and kills children with 0 repercussions.

Shamot@jlai.lu on 03 Jun 19:50 next collapse

This feature is mandatory in all new cars sold in the European Union since 2024

ThirdConsul@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 20:21 next collapse

There is no requirement to use it though. So blame the manufacturers if it’s hard to disable it.

Bloomcole@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 20:46 next collapse

is it hard to find tape?

DieserTypMatthias@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 20:53 collapse

No it isn’t, just look up how to hook up a laptop to an EDR for your specific car.

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 00:55 collapse

Honestly, if I were a young high school student looking for a career path today, and I was interested in automotive repair? I would seriously consider starting up a mechanic’s shop specializing in ripping out all the spytech from personal automobiles.

ohshit604@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 21:35 next collapse

Hammer meet centre punch.

1984@lemmy.today on 03 Jun 21:58 next collapse

I bought a new car from 2023, looks like I really dodged a bullet.

Its just insane how used we are now to being on camera everywhere. Even in our own cars???

bold_atlas@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 23:25 next collapse

Check for a cam anyway.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:35 collapse

What’s insane is how many libertarians drive drunk, texting, or stoned, putting a massive burden on insurance, healthcare, families, and >30,000 deaths a year.

So yeah, you might get recorded jerking off while driving.

scottrepreneur@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 22:51 next collapse

All new 2027 cars in the US also

thericcer@reddthat.com on 04 Jun 14:38 collapse

Also in the US from 2027 onward. It’s in the 2021 infrastructure bill.

MyVeryRealName@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 19:55 next collapse

Wdym the car complains about it?

Auli@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 23:19 collapse

Its there to check if your drunk and or drowsy. So it can not allow the car to turn on if blocked.

MyVeryRealName@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 20:00 collapse

A car shouldn’t be stopped by a camera

fira@lemmy.today on 03 Jun 20:09 next collapse

This is completely fucked up. Watch someone dig up that Palantir pushed this legislation before they were a household name & recognized as the scum they are

Trilogy3452@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 20:13 next collapse

“Your insurance claim is denied, our algorithm says it’s 70% confident your eyes were dilated in a way consistent with taking alcohol. Also, here’s your court hearing date”

quarkquasar@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 21:00 next collapse

The only way I’d tolerate a camera in a vehicle with me would be if I was simply using it as a taxi, and it was driving itself and monitoring the inside.

Otherwise, nah. Any camera in a car I owned would be getting disabled and destroyed just for safe measure.

Rolder@reddthat.com on 03 Jun 21:19 next collapse

That’d be getting covered immediately if it ended up in a car of mine

spicehoarder@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 21:40 collapse

It’s tied to your ignition system.

Rolder@reddthat.com on 03 Jun 21:41 collapse

Well that’s dumb as fuck. Return it is!

InputZero@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 22:41 collapse

Agreed but it’s a common feature in a lot of cars and I’m assuming mandated in the state of California.

Mossheart@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 22:47 collapse

I don’t think they sell Renaults in Cali

jenesaisquoi@feddit.org on 04 Jun 17:06 collapse

Correct, no French cars in the USA

Retro_unlimited@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 21:33 next collapse

It will be used against you at every opportunity.

Grass@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 21:39 next collapse

anybody that doesn’t think its an issue is an idiot

minorkeys@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 22:14 next collapse

It’s to disempower you. All of this is to further disempower the masses.

[deleted] on 04 Jun 05:30 collapse

.

NihilsineNefas@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 06:44 next collapse

Never mind the surveillance state run by fascists who want nothing more than a neutered population that lets them do what they want.

Or the fact that the world is building data centers on behalf of techbros that openly state that they want to control the entire population through limiting their access to information and rendering it a subscription

Or the manipulation of public opinion through 24h news cycles and infinite pundits online that pick and choose their words very carefully to make people believe what the news station owners want them to think (and I quote) “He’s telling them what to think. That’s our job.”/“This is very dangerous to our democracy.”

Or the petrochemical companies paying billions to super pacs and lobbying groups so that anti pollution laws don’t get pushed and the media circus doesn’t talk about how many spills there are, or why our air is becomic toxic, or why the things that climate scientists have been warning the world about are coming true one after another.

It’s aaaaallll just a “conspiracy theory”

Nothing to see. In the words of an amazon manager standing over a dying colleague instead of calling an ambulance “Lets not look, Get back to work”

MiddleAgesModem@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 07:39 collapse

the surveillance state

The “surveillance state” that creates EU laws that required this camera?

You just put out a bunch of random, unconnected things so yeah, you’re a dumbfuck conspiracy theorist and an embarrassment to logical thinking.

NihilsineNefas@slrpnk.net on 05 Jun 12:04 collapse

The laws that make it a requirement for cars to surveil their occupants at all times and analyse their face, what they’re looking at, what they’re doing at all times?

The laws that are created by the state to make surveillance mandatory. THAT surveillance state.

I brought up techbros building data centers because where do you think all the information from these cameras is being stored and analysed?

I brought up the mass media circus because that’s what’s used to force a pubpic opinion on topics such as this by obfuscating any potential negative opinions as ‘whackjob conspiracy theories’ or in the form of calling anyone with doubts on LLMs and ML algos being called intelligent ‘the new luddites’

(Or worse yet, the americans deciding that any anti AI or anti datacenter language is on par with domestic terrorism)

Keep enjoying your yam. Don’t mind the sound of the jackboots against your neigbours door, you have nothing to hide and thus of course, nothing to fear.

TotalCourage007@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 08:08 next collapse

Yeah and the AI Power Grab mentioned by Bernie Sanders totally isn’t happening right before our eyes.

MiddleAgesModem@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 07:43 collapse

Bernie has repeatedly embarrassed himself on that issue and has proven he is too old to understand such issues.

minorkeys@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 08:12 collapse

With reasoning like that, I guess nothing is ever a conspiracy to people like you.

History very clearly shows the myriad ways the powerful enact ‘conspiracy theory’ agendas, regularly. To not include these learnings in your worldview is folly. Epstein is a giant ‘conspiracy theory’ that’s sitting out in the open. The inaction to do anything about it is another one.

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 14:21 next collapse

We have the so-called “conspiracy theories” proven into actual conspiracies on a daily basis, so-yeah, the chances of those theories being factual is extremely high. Thus, everything is a conspiracy.

MiddleAgesModem@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 07:42 collapse

Prove this one then, right now.

Oh wait, you think proof of some other one is proof on ALL OF THEM? That’s fucking embarrassing.

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 05 Jun 22:50 collapse

Wao 🤣

MiddleAgesModem@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 07:42 collapse

With reasoning like that, I guess nothing is ever a conspiracy to people like you.

It’s MY reasoning that’s suspect? I love how NOT instantly believing every ridiculous claim of conspiracy is somehow illogical.

I don’t give a fuck if loosely defined “conspiracies” have existed, IT DOES NOT MEAN EVERY CONSPIRACY CLAIM IS AUTOMATICALLY RIGHT.

rumba@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 22:37 next collapse

Wait till the 2027 gets the seat rectal probe to verify you by your large intestine. Also, they sell the data to health insurance providers.

Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 22:58 next collapse

“It” from South Park might as well be a reality.

Possibly NSFW

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f095e805-906a-4f13-8a82-97964da585ca.jpeg">

rumba@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 00:00 collapse

bwuahahaha possibly :)

JillyB@beehaw.org on 04 Jun 01:54 next collapse

Wait I thought we were talking about bad features…

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:32 collapse

Passenger airbag sensors already measure weight and send that data.

rumba@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 16:08 collapse

yeah the one in my car is wierd AF. I can set it off with a dozen sheets of paper, but not a backpack. A pizza, but not a grocery bag.

AIgirl@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 22:57 next collapse

Opps I broke it…oh well.

AlteredEgo@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 23:31 next collapse

I mean I would like a dashcam that records front, my face and out the rear window. But it has to be under MY control.

I’d never buy a car with a camera I can’t control. No doubt they’ll soon turn it into some subscription shit or spy on you.

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 00:53 next collapse

I do find this attitude interesting. You don’t want yourself to be recorded, but you’ll happily record random pedestrians without their knowledge or consent.

AlteredEgo@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 09:26 collapse

So in my country it’s pretty “limited” because of that. You’re allowed to use a dash-cam as long as it doesn’t permanently record. ONLY if there is a crash or a crime you may press the “record and keep the last X minutes” button. I mean that is how most dash-cams function anyway. And you can’t publicly share it without consent of people you filmed or blur their faces and tags. So a legal framework already exists that protects citizens privacy while still allowing to collect video evidence.

Hmm… of course next step would need to be to have dashcams that have a sensors that encrypt and authenticate the video using a random key, to have a higher confidence that you haven’t generated AI footage showing the other person at fault.

Vinylraupe@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 03:20 collapse

Ehm, what do you mean by soon?

qaeta@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 23:39 next collapse

“what about the camera on your laptop?”

My personal laptop does not have a camera, and my work laptop has a physical camera blocker.

Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 00:06 next collapse

You have to log your profile into your car?? Fuck everything about that!

Psiczar@aussie.zone on 04 Jun 00:20 collapse

You don’t login, the car recognises you and adjusts settings such as the seat position to the way you like to have it without you having to do it manually, it’s a convenience thing.

Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 00:23 next collapse

Is it conveniently connected to the internet and sending data about you to anywhere beyond your control?

Psiczar@aussie.zone on 04 Jun 00:28 collapse

Depends on the car. I think Tesla’s are always connected, but other brands you have to put a SIM card in so you have a choice.

I get the concern, I wouldn’t want to be monitored constantly by a 3rd party, but in this case I think it’s just for safety (monitoring driver fatigue) and convenience.

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 14:15 collapse

You give car manufacturers too much credit with this ‘benefit of the doubt’.

PhoenixDog@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 00:33 next collapse

I have a 2019 Edge that has preset seat settings. They’re on buttons on the door where you can set your seat configuration up with the seat adjustments and such, hold down the button 1, 2, or 3 to save it, and when you turn the car off it shifts to default. So when you get into the car, push your number and it just adjusts everything for you.

It does not need to scan your face or identify you in any way. It’s a button next to the door unlock.

Psiczar@aussie.zone on 04 Jun 00:38 next collapse

Yeah, that’ would’ve been the way to do it before cameras were added.

It probably also does steering wheel height, aircon temp etc.

If the manufacturer is required by law to have a camera to monitor driver fatigue then they’ll make use it for other things like this.

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 14:14 collapse

Yeah, and for free, at the beginning. Then it’ll become a subscription.

frostysauce@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 17:17 collapse

Wait, “when you turn the car off it shifts to default,” so the seat doesn’t just stay where it is when you turn the car off?

PhoenixDog@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 20:01 collapse

Nope. It moves into a default position so it’s easier to exit/enter. When I start it it’ll automatically shift into the last preset used.

So if I start the car tomorrow, it’ll shift into my setting. If my partner wants the car, they just have to push the 1 on the door and it’ll shift into theirs.

frostysauce@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 20:58 collapse

OK, that makes sense. At least it goes back to the last position.

lightnsfw@reddthat.com on 04 Jun 03:55 collapse

I’m the only one that drives my car. I don’t need spyware to adjust the seat for me.

NotEasyBeingGreen@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 08:29 next collapse

My family only has one car. We don’t have pre-recorded seat settings, but it would be handy.

lightnsfw@reddthat.com on 04 Jun 15:37 collapse

There’s ways of doing per-recorded settings without putting a spy camera in your vehicle.

placebo@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 15:34 collapse

Well, cars aren’t built specifically for you. Many customers find this feature useful.

lightnsfw@reddthat.com on 04 Jun 17:59 collapse

There’s ways of achieving this without the privacy invasion.

geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 00:10 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/3a092f8d-fa54-4ace-892e-20abd375c24e.png">

fubbernuckin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 01:35 collapse

The car complains when the camera is covered. At a minimum that means making annoying sounds every time you drive anywhere, at worst the car doesn’t let you drive. You can’t just dismiss this, it’s going to happen more and more, and they will be increasingly hostile to your workarounds.

AfricanExpansionist@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 01:40 next collapse

Break the camera? Remove it? Scratch the lens?

[deleted] on 04 Jun 02:07 next collapse

.

xthexder@l.sw0.com on 04 Jun 03:16 collapse

In a few years, this might brick your car. Have fun paying to have it towed to the dealership. User-caused damage isn’t covered under warranty by the way.

.

.

Why does everything have to suck so much…

lightnsfw@reddthat.com on 04 Jun 03:54 collapse

Because the people making these laws aren’t handled appropriately.

autonomous@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 03:13 collapse

So disconnect the speaker and the noise should stop

Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 04 Jun 15:18 collapse

On some vehicles that’s the same speaker which makes the turn signal clicks and any kind of beeps or dings the car might make to alert that something’s wrong. I had that speaker go out on my vehicle not too long ago and it was actually harder to drive without being able to hear the turn signals and not getting the alert if i forgot to disengage the parking break (it seems to electronically disengage when you put it in drive so there’s no change in driving characteristics with this car when you drive with the parking break on)

DarrinBrunner@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 00:13 next collapse

Fucking hell.

I’ll be sticking with 2015 and older for as long as I can.

PierceTheBubble@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 00:16 next collapse

Honestly I only think it’s fair, to also have the driver be subject to surveillance, when they knowingly expose others to the car’s exterior cameras.

JillyB@beehaw.org on 04 Jun 01:56 collapse

I have nothing against personal dash cams. I don’t like them internet connected.

scala@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 00:23 next collapse

Nope. Take it right back.

ThunderQueen@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 00:47 next collapse

Some of these dorks out here would fr be supportive of a “smart” camera in their toilet looking straight at their hole/s. “I have nothing to hide, its just videos of me pooping”

Vinylraupe@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 03:18 collapse

When the hole is opening an algorithm decides if its a fart/diarrhea/shit and adds the right amount of water to the bowl. Also the right amount of toilet paper rolls out.

When your session is over it ejects you from the toilet so we have maximum toiletefficiency.

People will call it toiletmaxxing.

ThunderQueen@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 03:43 collapse

I pictured it more like the system Rick had where it just analyzes his stool for abnormalities but that is way more accurate. And by the “correct” amount of tp, way too much, because its made by charmin

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 00:52 next collapse

Does your state have a lemon law? If you can, return the car as it’s clearly defective.

LovableSidekick@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 01:05 next collapse

In many states any information not disclosed by the seller is grounds for you canceling the deal. But you would have to look that up for where you live. Or there’s black tape, but then you’re still paying for a camera you didn’t want, aren’t using, and weren’t told about.

AfricanExpansionist@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 01:39 next collapse

I’d just cover it or break it 🤷

NihilsineNefas@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 06:24 collapse

Void the warranty on a car that you paid 50,000 for, which was worth 30,000 by the time you drove it off the dealer’s lot?

bstix@feddit.dk on 04 Jun 03:16 next collapse

It’s an EU decision. It will be coming to many more cars as it will be mandatory from July 2026 for all newly registered vehicles. Renault 5 is simply one of the first new cars to feature it.

According to the same law, it is illegal to use the system in a way that can identify the person, it may not save biometrics, and it must function in closed loop without sharing the data. It’s looking for things like head nodding or looking away from the road for more than 3.5 seconds while driving over 50 km/h. The camera is likely using infrared lighting as it should also work at night.

Anyway. According to the manual, it can be disabled by double tapping a button on the steering wheel or through the touch screen menus, though it will default to being enabled everytime you start the car as per the legal requirement.

If you cover it with tape, wear a mask or drive somebody else’s car in which you don’t have a profile saved, it will simply use the last previous profile and show an icon in the dashboard as a warning that the function isn’t working.

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 04 Jun 08:01 collapse

Thank you for the clarification!

I wish, Renault and/or the salesperson would communicate clearly about the camera. It’s way creepier when there is just a camera looking at you without having the context of it being required and which privacy requirements it has per law.

Interestingly, if I disable the function and then cover the camera, a warning still appears. I don’t know if that’s due to a weird implementation by Renault or a thing implied by the law

bstix@feddit.dk on 04 Jun 09:53 next collapse

I think it’s an update from January. The first produced R5s doesn’t seem to have the camera on the A-pillar. It’s part of the media system which is used in other models as well.

I can’t imagine that rentals or fleet cars will throw a warning every time someone new uses the car, so I want to bet that the warnings can be disabled somehow with the right access to the ECU.

Renault uses their own ECU computers, which are quite expensive, but previous versions have been accessible using an OSB dongle with other software.

I’m sure someone will eventually figure out how to get into the system once these cars get old enough to reach the used market.

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 14:11 collapse

Unfortunately, unless you ask very specific questions about cars when buying, old or new, no salesperson will volunteer any information that could potentially jeopardize the closing of a sale.

autonomous@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 03:20 next collapse

Find and disable the antenna used by the cars electronics.

hanrahan@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 03:29 next collapse

yes, it’s in my BYD, i like it. i have read of people complain that it beeps at them, the # of false positives is infintesimally small. Im more alarmed at being on the road with assholes who have taped over it because it keeps telling them. to pay attention… wtg kind if shitty driver are they ?

As an Australian, I have zero issues with chinese cars spying on me, i assume they are, i refuse to buy a car from the five-eyes as it’s my government spying on me that’s the real concern. (no euro car, no american car etc)

pineapple@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 05:22 next collapse

Your concern is definitely justified. This is creepy as hell.

jaypatelani@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 05:50 next collapse

Monthly subscription for safety features coming soon 🔜

yogurt@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 06:06 next collapse

Required in the EU and will be required in the US soon. BYD’s big export market is Australia which doesn’t require them yet but they’re mandatory to get a good crash safety rating.

Renault and a lot of BYDs use Android as the software os, so probably it’s Android doing the facial recognition (and also probably the attention eye tracking) and that’s onboard.

Renault has a dashcam function that records from the built in cameras, but you have to plug in your own USB drive, so the upside of memory price-fixing is it’s probably not worth it for Renault to spend $300 to store the data now.

DieserTypMatthias@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 07:42 collapse

So it’ll be possible to root the car through an OBD2 port, theoretically.

locahosr443@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 10:01 collapse

Maybe but I don’t see you doing that over can us so it would need other connection to the ICE. I’d guess all those updates are OTA now.

I’m guessing though, 2014 is my newest car

DieserTypMatthias@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 12:37 collapse

If you have access to the port, you can do some really cool stuff, like installing Magisk (app for generating rooted version of the Android ROM based on your filesystem), unlocking bootloader and flashing the image, since some manufacturers don’t know that less is more.

Spoiler

See the Security issues part of the article.

endless_nameless@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 06:17 next collapse

I’m cool with just not driving. Fuck you, car manufacturers. If I can’t feasibly live a lifestyle on public transit I’ll buy the oldest shittiest shitbox on Earth and drive it until it fucking explodes.

TotalCourage007@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 08:05 next collapse

I’m desperately holding on to my Ford Ranger for this exact reason. Obligatory Fuck car manufacturers.

manuremy@sopuli.xyz on 04 Jun 11:33 collapse

I’ll deal and keep fixing my 2001 lil Japanese car until it really gives up. I might even get a whole “new” motor in. If after all that it’s imposible to buy another old, pre-2000 car, I won’t bother. Fuck them. The lights are too bright and unsafe, the screens are unsafe and now these cameras and all? Ew. If you can’t fix it yourself in your garage with basic tools and some beer, you don’t own the thing.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 12:23 next collapse

Then you are significantly sacrificing your safety. Please get a car made at least after 2013, preferably 2016, if you value your life.

manuremy@sopuli.xyz on 04 Jun 12:25 next collapse

Trust me, the level of elder care in my country, that’s the least of my worries. I also don’t want to burn into a crisp inside an electric car that won’t open it’s doors once it sets on fire.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 12:34 collapse

Do you have people who count on you? Who love you? Whose lives would be changed were you gone? If so, consider them when you consider your personal safety.

I wasn’t talking about electric cars, just any car made after 2013-2016 ish

manuremy@sopuli.xyz on 04 Jun 12:43 next collapse

Yes, I got people. But we all agree that we get the time we get and dying with your boots on is a whole lotta better than suffering slowly for years.

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 14:06 next collapse

You keep saying that. We’d like to know what are the factors that lead to thinking that anything pre-2013 is not safe.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 15:12 collapse

The failure of IIHS’ small overlap test

frostysauce@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 17:10 collapse

What is that and what does it mean?

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 17:29 next collapse

Google my friend

ricecake@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 21:09 collapse

It’s typically considered bad form to tell someone to Google your point for you instead of actually explaining your point yourself.
You’re clearly trying to convince people of something. Actually do that instead of telling people keywords that mean something to you.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 22:16 collapse

Alright

ricecake@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 20:05 collapse

They run a car into something that only crunches a corner. Simulates a tree, telephone pole, or guard rail collision.
Uneven force application is much harder to safely accommodate, and it’s also a more representative crash test, since more crashes happen in that manner than full width head-on collisions.

frostysauce@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 20:59 collapse

Thank you.

magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 04 Jun 14:52 collapse

What specifically would a newer car have my 9th gen civic wouldn’t?

Two things I know of that mean anything are collision detection/prevention and blindspot sensors.

The ladder of those things can be added aftermarket.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 15:10 collapse

It won’t fail the small overlap crash test, but some years of the 9th gen civic are okay

magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 04 Jun 15:15 collapse

2013 survives it, I really doubt they made much a change because that was that gens second year.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 17:25 collapse

Thats simply not true: autoweek.com/…/honda-volvo-models-named-top-safet…

magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 05 Jun 05:17 collapse

Huh, fuck me, nvm.

Poem_for_your_sprog@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 13:23 next collapse

I mean it’s safer than a motorcycle.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 17:28 collapse

No shit

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 14:04 next collapse

Why exactly? What does a post-2016 car do, safety-wise, that a 1998 Honda Accord can’t?

FinalRemix@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 15:05 next collapse

It’ll have Whittier sight lines and require a backup camera because of it.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 17:28 collapse

Achieve a “Good” rating on the 2012 IIHS small overlap test

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:30 next collapse

Can you be more cryptic?

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 15:11 collapse

2012 was the first year the IIHS introduced the small overlap test, which only a handful of cars passed, and took most manufacturers a few years to get good ratings for

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 16:24 collapse

Its the bro dozers that endanger us, not the 01 civics. Ban large trucks or require special licensing for any vehicle over 3500 lbs to drive. Almost No one needs a truck for daily use. 95% if people could did a brz or miata and be completely fine. If theres kids, a small 4 runner or a wagon would suffice. If theyre farmers, then they can use trucks only for towing or hauling. Limited mileage per year otherwise.

Also I sound like a European here. I’m not. And I own a truck. I only use it for work and towing.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 17:20 collapse

You are completely misunderstanding me

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 19:49 collapse

That old cars are unsafe ? Sure, a 60s chevette will kill you. A 2002 era car is going to be pretty safe unless a huge truck hits you.

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 16:22 collapse

I’m with you. Keep these cars alive !!

I need to get in my welding. Most of the time its just rust killing these cars, mechanically they go forever.

manuremy@sopuli.xyz on 05 Jun 09:15 collapse

Welding is quite handy skill in life, cars or no cars!

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 05 Jun 15:48 collapse

For sure it is

DieserTypMatthias@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 07:48 next collapse

I’ll just buy a second-hand 2011 Skoda Fabia. Compact car that just works and doesn’t spy on you. Though I’d rather buy the LPG version of it because it costs 86 eurocents/liter here.

bridgeburner@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 08:03 next collapse

I fckn hate these laws that force so much tech into new cars under the guise of safety. Not only is it a massive breach in privacy (I don’t care if the car manufacturers claim they don’t use this data for identification, I won’t belive them), but it also makes small cars way more expensive, comparatively. Fck this sh*t, cars have been becoming obnoxiously expensive and forced BS tech like that just makes everything worse.

boboliosisjones@feddit.nu on 04 Jun 08:41 next collapse

Clearly they use it for identification if as the OP said the camera can be used to load your driver profile. As far as I know that goes directly against the EU law stating no biometric data can be processed by the camera.

iocase@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 09:03 next collapse

It’s rent seeking through regulations. It’s too expensive to make a simple car that also complies with these regulations. The only people who can afford to do it are gigantic established brands with a century of production lines and established infrastructure.

“Oh no. More car brands failed. We can’t let them fail can we? Allow us to merge more?”

“Oh no. We’re in trouble financially. If we die you won’t have cars at all any more because we merged everything. Lots and lots of your voters will be pissed if that happens. There’s also no way in hell a new car brand is going to establish itself when it costs so damn much to meet these regulations we lobbied and guided to benefit our established interests”

Bluescluestoothpaste@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 13:53 next collapse

Yeah they could mandate dual side mirrors to cover blind spots that would prevent a lot of crashes, but they rather mandate a beeping sound right before you crash instead idk

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:29 next collapse

Calm down, Francis, it’s a $9 camera that watches if you are nodding off or using your phone while driving.

These are among the activities that kill 30,000 people a year on US roads.

Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 04 Jun 15:11 next collapse

I fckn hate these laws that force so much tech into new cars under the guise of safety.

Well you see, if we force car companies to invent magical safety technology to paper over bad road design and too many cars on the road, then we can avoid addressing the bad road design and too many cars on the road!

frostysauce@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 17:06 next collapse

You can swear on the internet.

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:46 collapse

they are turning us into worker consumer slaves… all the freedoms the boomer got to enjoy… welp those days are over and the voting booth will not change this. Full-spectrum dominance + Imperial boomerang = We are slaves and there is no future via the voting booth. Big Brother knows best. Both parties are OK with this.

boboliosisjones@feddit.nu on 04 Jun 08:21 next collapse

I think it’s unacceptable and indicative of this dangerous path we are headed down as whole. There’s already been a few write ups on how cars are the most privacy disrespecting “devices” out there, which is wild considering we have smartphones.

With the driver facing camera we have no control over it also has complete access to our travel data, probably knows exactly who we are in the car with, records all our private conversations etc. etc.

It’s so tiring to hear people defend this as if privacy is a thing of the past and anyone advocating it is being dramatic.

stupidcasey@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 09:24 next collapse

Black tape ought to solve it, if not a pair of wire cutters.

Bronstein_Tardigrade@lemmygrad.ml on 04 Jun 09:26 next collapse

Another in the list of a “1001 Things To Do With Duct Tape.”

gsv@programming.dev on 04 Jun 09:37 next collapse

I don’t think you are paranoid. This technology is creepy as hell. Almost all cars are connected nowadays and send data back to the manufacturer’s server—visible or not. In the best case it’s just the service history, in the worst case live positions and more. Some cars stop working if the server is shut down *cough. Cameras equipped to unlock based on a face record biometric data. And honestly, would you trust your car manufacturer (!) to handle your biometric data?

gandalf_der_12te@feddit.org on 04 Jun 22:33 collapse

even if they don’t explicitly send GPS coordinates, if they send anything at all repeatedly, your position can be guessed from which mobile tower you connect to

vegafjord@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 10:22 next collapse

Surveillance is good as long as we like the direction the machine is heading.

Sirius006@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 10:45 next collapse

Side question : is your car connected to the internet ?

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 04 Jun 11:22 collapse

Yes, it has a 2GB/month sim card as far as i am aware

NauticalNoodle@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 13:06 next collapse

Were you aware of that before you got the car?

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 14:27 next collapse

Are you aware all new cars are connected?

NauticalNoodle@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 16:30 next collapse

not if you’re buying used. Also, I seriously doubt it’s actually “all new cars.”

TwiddleTwaddle@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 04 Jun 16:49 collapse

It actually is all new cars. You have to go back almost 20 years to find anything not internet connected

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 16:56 next collapse

and we have to pay for the privilege to be spied upon as well.

bassad@jlai.lu on 05 Jun 06:12 collapse

I think 2015-2020 was the shift, causebadvanced driving systems were made mandatory for constructors in UE since 2019.

My 2010 car has no connection, but it begins to crumble (needs repairs for more than 3k), I’m lucky I can go anywhere by bike.

zod000@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 16:47 collapse

The Slate looks like it won’t be, hence my interest.

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 04 Jun 17:22 collapse

No

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:41 collapse

Fuck you didn’t know. I am sorry. To bad you are not my friend… But yet people don’t listen and think I am a tin foil hat man. I saw this from a 1000 miles away. It gets worse too.

Sirius006@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 18:50 collapse

Oh shit. You don’t have the option to disable it?

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 04 Jun 23:19 collapse

Only the warning feature. When disabled, the car still notices when the camera is coverd.

Sirius006@sh.itjust.works on 05 Jun 07:11 collapse

I meant : can you disable the internet connection ? Reading the other comments I guess not…

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:40 collapse

Your cell phone can still dial 911 and use cell service without a sim. Also something to consider is ESIM… They are building the technoslave hell scape and we all got our thumbs up our arses. The IOT world is a slave tracke world

picnic@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 10:57 next collapse

I have the inner cam covered on my tesla, no probs so far (been like that for 4 years)

NikkiDimes@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 19:00 collapse

Same, but 5 years. I’m dreading the day they push an update that forces you to uncover it.

Someone8765210932@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 11:03 next collapse

Wasn’t there some news a while ago that talked about how bad car companies handle user data?

Mozilla’s latest edition of *Privacy Not Included reveals how 25 major car brands collect and share deeply personal data, including sexual activity, facial expressions, and genetic and health information

[…]Says Jen Caltrider, *PNI Program Director: “Many people think of their car as a private space — somewhere to call your doctor, have a personal conversation with your kid on the way to school, cry your eyes out over a break-up, or drive places you might not want the world to know about. But that perception no longer matches reality. All new cars today are privacy nightmares on wheels that collect huge amounts of personal information."[…] (source)

Not sure if this was the one I was thinking about. There was also this revelation made by the German CCC (Chaos computer club, pretty famous) about Volkswagen and some leaked GPS data. Here is an English article about it. (There is also the German CCC video, but the English doesn’t sound very good. It includes an interesting part where they show examples of how bad this GPS leak actually is. E.g. finding the cars of catering companies for important people.)

Criminals or spies could potentially use such data to create a detailed movement profile of the car owners. For foreign intelligence agencies, for example, it may be of interest to see whose cars are parked daily between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. near buildings belonging to the Bundesnachrichtendienst, Germany’s foreign intelligence service. Or those which are driven regularly to the U.S. Air Force base in Ramstein. The Cariad data provided such information.

Btw. Any person who in the year 2026 response to privacy concerns with “I have nothing to hide” is a certified moron and shouldn’t be trusted with anything. They also have so little imagination that it should make everyone sad.

OrgunDonor@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 15:48 next collapse

I don’t think it is fair to call them morons, ignorant definitely though. I imagine that so many of these people don’t understand or know, how invasive a modern car is. And it is probably something they have never thought about or looked into.

Ignorance is bad, but can be fixed. Morons I don’t think can really be taught, and would probably ignore the evidence of how bad it is.

Someone8765210932@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 17:38 next collapse

The reason for the insult is less about not knowing how invasive modern cars are and more about the often repeated “I have nothing to hide” comment. It just shows how little they think these kinds of situations through. Unless they are very young, it also shows that any previous privacy related discussion went right by them, or they also answered the same way back than as well.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 05 Jun 01:09 collapse

Agree. I think there’s even yet a third type. People who are not ignorant, and also not morons. But they are soooo far into a sunk cost fallacy that they will find endless rationalizations. And if they’re smart ppl, which some of 'em are, they can be very clever at finding rationaliztaions.

teyrnon@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 16:12 next collapse

Also, police can get your car data without a warrant in the US as I understand it, and if you link your car to your phone, they can get into your phone without one, with no indication to you that they accessed it. Basically everything, phone calls, messages, contacts, etc.

That may mean hackers could get into that backdoor they left open for the police too I would think.

The enshitified search is not giving me the article despite finding it multiple times just this year, but I read it in the Intercept a couple of years ago or something.

gandalf_der_12te@feddit.org on 04 Jun 22:31 collapse

Any person who in the year 2026 response to privacy concerns with “I have nothing to hide” is a certified moron

the response to “i have nothing to hide” should be “… because there’s nothing inside”

UltraMagnus0001@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 11:47 next collapse

Pull the telematics fuse, although I think they integrate it in so many things now it’s rediculous.

quips@slrpnk.net on 04 Jun 12:22 next collapse

Destroy the camera bro

Gulliver@lemmy.zip on 05 Jun 10:29 next collapse

it’s forbidden the camera is part of the new eu security regulation

quips@slrpnk.net on 05 Jun 13:53 collapse

They can forbid deez nutz

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:37 collapse

Electical tape cut to shape

NauticalNoodle@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 12:59 next collapse

I’ve taken apart the screen bezel on my laptop to disable the webcam before -then covid happened. Now, i just cover the camera with taped paper. -I will never have one of these cars but if i found myself in your situation i wouldn’t be above using a hammer and screwdriver to remove the camera and dealing with the consequences after.

jjlinux@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 13:49 next collapse

I have a BYD Han, and the camera has a sliding cover, which has never been opened. Its crazy that you can’t cover it without the car complaining.

mriormro@lemmy.zip on 05 Jun 01:14 collapse

Spray paint or a hammer work real good.

How anyone can accept this kind of shit is insane to me.

Bluescluestoothpaste@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 13:51 next collapse

It’s definitely creepy, but i can see someone who has gotten in trouble driving sleepy might want it?

RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 14:16 next collapse

Nothing a piece of tape won’t fix.

schipelblorp@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 15:02 next collapse

Until the update that bricks the car unless it can consistently recognize a face.

Buying a new car in 2026 is a risky proposition with no horizon.

RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 15:23 collapse

Need one of those old photo viewer thingys and just put a face pic in it, tape it to the cam.

!()[…redd.it/mini-photo-viewer-magnifier-spyglass-thi…]

teyrnon@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 16:07 collapse

I’ve been covering my laptop user facing cameras with something since I first got a laptop with one a long time ago. The phone one I haven’t though, although others do scratch the lens and just use the outward one. Idk how to cover the phone one without blocking part of the screen.

mosspiglet@discuss.online on 04 Jun 18:38 next collapse

This is one of the things I love about my Thinkpad. It has a little sliding cover for the camera.

teyrnon@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 19:38 collapse

My case has a sliding cover for the outside one.

Nosavingthrow@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 18:46 collapse

Paint marker? Paint?

teyrnon@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 19:40 collapse

I need something I can remove and put back as needed, although I rarely ever use it anyway maybe I should just paint it. The screen actually just got fucked and I need a new phone and am getting on graphene so hopefully it’s a little less of a concern if I learn the security aspects of all this in this crash course I will be taking. Hopefully can switch laptop to linux next.

prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 04 Jun 14:31 next collapse

You might be able to remove the corresponding fuse

Sasquatch@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 14:43 next collapse

Unlikely this camera is on a fuse by itself. If this camera is faulted, or can’t see a face, it’s likely all driver assistance features, like lane centering or adaptive cruise control, would be disabled.

That might be a dealbreaker for some

jenesaisquoi@feddit.org on 04 Jun 16:55 collapse

like lane centering or adaptive cruise control, would be disabled.

Good. These features make sense if you’re 96 years old and drunk. For everyone else, they make the driving worse.

Keeping to the very right of the road, so that oncoming cars can pass a cyclist with a safe distance for everyone? No, goes the drunk retiree assistant, I’ll pull you to the centre for a nice head-on collision.

Sasquatch@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 17:15 collapse

Lane centering is designed to be compliant, not dominant, unlike self-driving (though I dont have experience with any self-driving systems. I’d bet they’re compliant as well, just less so).

It requires little input maybe 95% of the time, but (to my knowledge) all implementations require hands on the wheel, so that the human can immediately take over for the other 5%.

I can’t think of a case where adaptive cruise control is detrimental.

jenesaisquoi@feddit.org on 04 Jun 17:23 collapse

Lane centering is designed to be compliant, not dominant

In my case, it started pulling the car to the middle, while I was deliberately driving on the very right to avoid oncoming, passing traffic. I could override it by turning the steering wheel in the other direction, but there was a fair bit of resistance. It very nearly caused a serious accident. This all happened in a split-second at 80 km/h. Had I been old or less alert people might’ve died because of this dumb fucking idiot system.

Again, if someone so far gone or so heavily impaired they can’t keep a car in the middle of the lane, then the system is worth it. But then maybe that person shouldn’t be driving in the first place?

I can’t think of a case where adaptive cruise control is detrimental.

In a friend of mine’s car during rainfall the system detected a car in front where there in fact was none, and performed emergency braking. Again, a serious accident was only avoided due to the quick reaction of the following driver, or a rear-end collision at 120 km/h would’ve occurred.

These bullshit systems cause accidents.

QuincyPeck@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 20:45 collapse

This was my experience as well. I turned this feature off on my 2022 Kia because the tugging on the wheel is distracting and should not exist.

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:37 collapse

no

BrickEater@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 15:16 next collapse

And this is why I have 2 cars from the 80’s that I refuse to give up. They’re nearly 100% mechanical, carburated and with almost no necessary fuzes to run the two.

Rubanski@discuss.tchncs.de on 04 Jun 20:18 next collapse

Same here but with my 70s motorcycle! It was the first in its line with ✨disk brake✨ (in the front)

Small_Quasar@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 02:26 collapse

I’m coming to you if there’s an EMP attack.

tino@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 16:02 next collapse

This car also comes with a ChatGPT based AI assistant which has a cursed Microsoft’s Clippy vibe, so it watches, listens to everything. Why would anybody want that? <img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/cc1da8e1-573b-4ccc-ac97-059b6083124d.png">

solidheron@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 17:06 next collapse

Can’t wait for chatgpt to be discontinued

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 04 Jun 17:22 next collapse

I was luckily able to disable that one through androids app manager

BrickEater@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 17:32 collapse

Yeah the problem is though its still there and nearly invetiably going to remove your ability to disable it at some point if your car is allowed to update.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 05 Jun 00:54 collapse

That, or Privacy Zuckering. Every update, you turn all the options back to “spy on me”. And maybe change all the wording and locations for good measure.

Sure, you can turn them back to “do not spy on me you assholes”. But 3 months later, new update… bam! Everything reset! Or new ones intruduced you don’t know anything about and you got to pray you notice those.

That way, the co can continue to claim in court, “we give customers options to manage their own privacy”. The fuck you do…

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 05 Jun 00:50 next collapse

Why would anybody want that?

Ayup that is the question. I’m tryin to figure that out with my friends.

Near as I figure… they just have an ENTIRELY different mindset. It’s like I might have about say a wrench. I buy the wrench. I use the wrench to wrench something. That’s all the thought I ever give to the wrench.

It’s like that for them with these surveilence products. It’s “cool”. Its “shiny”. It’s all Star Trek-y. They give exactly zero thought to their data. It’s a product from a big namebrand they know. They trust it based on that.

I try to get them to see a bigger picture. Iit’s an uphill battle. Endless rationalizations we all know, nothing to hide, I’m not important enough for anyone to care about, I’m not doing anything wrong.

Small_Quasar@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 02:25 collapse

It’s s all Star Trek-y.

Ironically, more than one Trek episode would only be five minutes long if they had all encompassing surveillance on Starfleet ships.

SanicHegehog@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 06:12 next collapse

Clippy wouldn’t listen to you without your knowledge.

He only wanted to help.

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:32 collapse

When I am in the chatgipty car I just scream “DEATH TO THE EMPIRE” … I guess hoping the gipity might help me do that… Like “Dear google gipity how do I destroy you” … I can’t believe people are STILL buying new cars

uberfreeza@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 16:16 next collapse

It’s creepy. And it may make me an asshole to say, but I’d never want an interior camera in the event of an accident. It makes the following court case so much more gray, since you now introduce the opportunity to say “they were on the phone, talking, listening to music, whatever” and shift what should be a clear cut case into something more.

glibg10b@lemmy.zip on 04 Jun 17:00 collapse

Not sure why you included “on the phone” in that list?

Retro_unlimited@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 17:53 collapse

If you look down at anything, they will say it’s a phone.

Eheran@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 19:25 collapse

Are you aware that phones are a mayor source of accidents? Being distracted is one of the or the biggest reason for crashes in general. Looking down is a distraction, regardless what you are looking for.

DisasterTransport@startrek.website on 04 Jun 19:56 collapse

Sure, but in the case of an accident that footage is ammunition. Maybe the other party was eating a four course dinner and cranking their hog, but unless they had an interior camera too you can’t prove a thing. These cameras seem like they would be a disadvantage in court no matter what.

uberfreeza@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 02:54 collapse

Yes, but I was thinking something as simple as “I’m cold, and I want to turn the fan off,” requiring looking down long enough for court to say it’s a phone. Adjusting literally anything can make it less straightforward, regardless of actual action. But yes, I only see an interior camera as a disadvantage.

DisasterTransport@startrek.website on 05 Jun 03:55 collapse

Ah yeah I got that and then kinda lost scope reading the reply. Non sequitur for a non sequitur.

oyzmo@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 17:13 next collapse

must be possible to disable the mobile chip? or at least wrap the antenna in some alufoil 😅

Duamerthrax@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 22:04 collapse

Everything has a fuse connecting it to power. The problem is, what else shuts off if the spyware is disconnected?

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 17:22 next collapse

I don’t know the purpose of this camera but sadly I have seen numerous driver battling against falling asleep, including on highways, so going faster than 100km/h on a 1ton machine.

You all might be excellent conscientious drivers who are horrified that the car might check on your ability to drive but I can tell you with 100% certainty that not all drivers, including otherwise very kind and caring people, are not always able to drive, yet still do so.

To be clear I am not advocating for any data to leave the car at any point. I’m only point that some usages of cameras pointing to the driver might be both beneficial to everybody and not be a privacy problem. How? Well detect the presence of eyes and if there is not, demand a conscious action (e.g. pressing a button) and if this does not work, increase stimulus, etc. This does NOT require any data from being sent to anybody.

Unrelated but I’m also for speed limiters for cars. I also do not think it’s a privacy issue.

Still, to clarify, safety MUST be improved WITHOUT hindering on privacy of anybody involved.

WraithGear@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 17:58 next collapse

except this sort of thing is already in use in amazon trucks to judge a driver at all times by an outside entity judgements made without context. why would you own something that can only make your case harder? you can’t not give it over as evidence if you have it. so it’s best not to have it.

there is an accident because the car ahead of you slammed their breaks on the open freeway, causing a crash, in court they point that you were at the moment before the crash were checking your rear view mirror and not the road based on the eye tracking, and argue if you were looking forward you would have avoided the accident.

or you could tape up the camera

NikkiDimes@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 18:54 next collapse

I do not support creepy driver facing cameras at all (my car has one, I cover it 100% of the time), but in the case of rear ending someone, it’s pretty much always your fault regardless of what happened. Maybe not the best example 😅

WraithGear@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 21:27 collapse

operating a vehicle runs on the assumption that the cars around you are operated in the realm of sanity. with acceptable human reaction the trained standard is a car distance of 3 seconds back. but that assumption is unblinking focus, which is not true in many cases. if you are preparing for a lane shift your attention is demanded by law elsewhere. break checking, or slamming unnecessarily on the break, does not defer guilt to the victim. the problem is that it’s hard to prove, unless you have a front facing camera which is a defensive measure. there is no defensive measure for an inward facing camera

NikkiDimes@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 01:45 collapse

I’m afraid you’re mistaken here.

Outside of brake* checking or other reckless behavior by the lead driver, rear ending someone because you were looking away to check mirrors is generally strong evidence that you failed to maintain a safe following distance given the circumstances. A driver facing camera would support that conclusion rather than absolve you of responsibility.

In the case of someone driving erratically and causing a front end collision, your typical front-facing dashcam would be all you need to prove your innocence.

WraithGear@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 06:13 collapse

correct, because a front end can is a defensive measure you add to your car to protect you. an inward facing camera can not ever be for your benefit.

NikkiDimes@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 07:34 collapse

Ah, I thought you were saying you could use the camera for the inverse. I misread your initial comment, my apologies.

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 05 Jun 15:32 collapse

This has nothing to do with work though and the power relationship between a boss and their subordinates, does it?

To be clear, again, I’m not saying what Amazon does its workers, in trucks or not, is good. It’s not.

WraithGear@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 15:35 collapse

it’s not good. which is why the inward facing camera in cars is not good. for the exact same reason.

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 05 Jun 15:49 collapse

But that’s not the same power relationship. The usage I explained is about safety for yourself, passengers and people on the road and nearby. The usage for Amazon is about increasing productivity and send the data up the hierarchy. They are not the same usage with the same technology.

WraithGear@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 17:36 collapse

the problem is you think there is or will be a difference

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 06 Jun 08:17 collapse

I clearly defined the context. You can argue for things outside of what I defined but then you’re not discussing about what I proposed. I can still repeat it in a simpler way at the risk of being condescending : if it’s misused, it’s bad. If it’s used properly for the reason I mention I do believe it’s good.

WraithGear@lemmy.world on 06 Jun 21:05 collapse

i am arguing what you proposed has not conformed to reality, that the actual result is already seen, and there is no defensive reason to allow inward facing cameras, there is only an additional risk when arguing culpability of an incident. and for that argument of ai helping to keep drivers alert, the full consequence of that thought has already played out as a detriment to truck drivers, with no noticeable gain

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 06 Jun 21:07 collapse

no defensive reason to allow inward facing cameras

So you don’t think me witnessing drivers falling asleep at the wheel is sufficient?

WraithGear@lemmy.world on 06 Jun 21:08 collapse

no

quarkquasar@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 18:02 collapse

Yeah, it’s like, I’m all for guns existing, I even think every human should get a free assault rifle, because reality is rough and they’re very useful.

Just as long as no one ever shoots each other. That should be totally off the table.

utopiah@lemmy.ml on 05 Jun 15:32 collapse

No idea what you are talking about. Are you saying a camera is like a gun?

Mearcfara@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 17:49 next collapse

Thank god for duct tape

pyre@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 19:22 next collapse

yeah so we can tape an entire duct around that shit

Semester3383@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 02:44 next collapse

You probably want to use your phone’s front-facing camera to look for other cameras that aren’t obvious.

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:34 collapse

nah electrical tape… less goo and it blends in… You can cut it to shape with a sharp razor blade

Sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 21:13 next collapse

“what about the camera on your laptop”

God I hate these people. That camera has been covered by duct tape for years for very good reasons. A lot of them actually apply to a driver-facing camera in my car, coincidentally.

Btw OP, I think Renault has a contract with Palantir

aikhae@lemmy.ohaa.xyz on 04 Jun 21:48 next collapse

Oh, god, have they? I’ve only read about Stellantis

Sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 05 Jun 11:52 collapse

Yeah I think I was mistaken. It does appear to be only stellantis so far. So Renault and alpine should be safe (and Aixam I guess if you lose your license)

Duamerthrax@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 22:02 collapse

My laptop also runs a 3rd party OS that doesn’t connect to the manufacturer.

glimse@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 21:31 next collapse

It IS a cool feature but the privacy concerns kinda override any positivity I might have toward it. If it was completely offline with available source code, I’d be on board.

gandalf_der_12te@feddit.org on 04 Jun 22:22 collapse

how do you know that the software running on the device is actually what’s advertised?

darkstar@sh.itjust.works on 04 Jun 21:57 next collapse

Log into your profile? On your car? Your car logs you in to a profile? What the fuck

jj4211@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 01:29 collapse

My car does this based on which keyfob is in the driver seat.

Various things like the seat position, radio presets, the color of the ambient lighting, some various driver mode settings.

I mean, it’s weird terminology and to my knowledge doesn’t imply anything about logging into any ‘online’ profile, just changing to another person’s settings. Adding a profile just requested some label, no email address or anything. Just something to associate with the keyfob.

It also has a driver facing camera, but it doesn’t use that for detecting which driver is there.

ChetManly@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 22:08 next collapse

Destroy the ccd with a high powered laser pointer

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:36 collapse

electrical tape no need to destroy it… it will be harder to sell to a technopitimist turd.

treesquid@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 22:21 next collapse

Disassemble that fucking thing. Why do people tolerate this kind of shit?

humorlessrepost@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 02:45 collapse

That often disables many comfort features, like self-driving.

[deleted] on 04 Jun 22:21 next collapse

.

bassad@jlai.lu on 05 Jun 06:45 next collapse

Good to know, thanks!

It is actually creepy, privacy invading, and dangerous in some cases, I think about the guy who made a video working in the woods, simulating a chainsaw accident, and the car would not start because the driver is not 100% able due adrenaline rush visible on his face.

That said, it is a mandatory feature from EU made in 2019 for public safety, with an affiched goal to reduce road deaths. The datas would be anonymous, exploited for statistics and must respect UE rgpd. In theory!

In one hand I find dangerous to track and supervise a population, in the other hand I see way too much dangerous behaviors on the road, especially around pedestrians and bikers, and a system that would say to the driver “hey you fucked up here, don’t do it again” would be nice.

Just an anecdote, an emergency brake system detected me walking and saved my life by breaking hard cause the driver was distracted (I was on a crosswalk), otherwise I would have been send to orbit.

lemmywinksthegerbilking@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 05 Jun 11:10 next collapse

break that shit with hammers

ratrace@lemmy.zip on 06 Jun 01:30 collapse

electric tape should do the trick

drolex@sopuli.xyz on 05 Jun 12:03 collapse

I used to be on the engineering team that worked on the development of a similar camera. For what it’s worth, at the time: there was no AI involved, we only used good old image processing algorithms. And the camera (all cameras, lidars, or radars on the car BTW) does not record anything. It treats images as they come. There’s almost no storage space on the car for all the image data generated.

All this might have changed since then (especially the AI part) but I’m still relatively confident that car systems don’t have the storage for all this data.

Additionally, since this is a European brand, I think it would be quite difficult to legally retain personal information like that. It was already difficult during the development phase.

I’m not saying they wouldn’t be above ominous shenanigans, but it would be difficult.