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When you sit in a “digital car” you consent to being recorded and personal data sold

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rangerrebew:
When you sit in a “digital car” you consent to being recorded and personal data sold
Car passengers.

By Jo Nova

People say things in a car they might never write in an email. Well, they used to.
Who knew? The Subaru privacy policy allows them to record your conversations and your face and sell that data to the highest bidder. Most likely (who reads these things) all the other car companies do too. When an AI analyzes it, presumably it will identify your voice (and you from the cameras). Anything you say in the public broadcasting world of private cars will belong to them, even if you are a passenger, and were never asked.

So if you want to have a private discussion about your political views, your children, your religion, troubles at work, intellectual property, discoveries, information that might affect stock prices, your thoughts on immigration, corruption, or mention any medical issues you have, or affairs anyone you know has had, don’t do it in an electric car. Imagine the blackmail, political, legal and insider potential with this data in the hands of…

“Subaru“, posted on Foundation Mozilla
Here’s something you might not realize. The moment you sit in the passenger seat of a Subaru that uses connected services, you’ve consented to allow them to use — and maybe even sell — your personal information. According to their privacy policy, that means things like your name, location, “Audio recordings of Vehicle Occupants”, and inferences they can draw about things like your “characteristics, predispositions, behavior, or attitudes.” Call us bonkers, but we don’t think that simply sitting in the passenger seat of someone’s Subaru should mean you consent to having any of your personal information use for, well, pretty much anything at all. Let alone potentially sold to data brokers or shared with third party marketers so they can target you with ads about who knows what based on the the inferences they draw about you because you sat in the back seat of a Subaru in the mountains of Colorado. We’re gonna really call out Subaru for this, because they lay it out so clearly in their privacy policy, but please know, Subaru isn’t the only car company doing this sort of icky thing.

Subaru also admit that when the information is transmitted they cannot guarantee that it will not be intercepted, only that they will do their best to look after your info after they receive it.

https://joannenova.com.au/2024/01/when-you-sit-in-a-digital-car-you-consent-to-being-recorded-and-personal-data-sold/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=when-you-sit-in-a-digital-car-you-consent-to-being-recorded-and-personal-data-sold

rustynail:
Subaru is going in a bad direction.

Smokin Joe:

--- Quote from: rustynail on January 04, 2024, 12:13:39 pm ---Subaru is going in a bad direction.

--- End quote ---
Someone will come out with a list of wires to cut.

Kamaji:

--- Quote from: rustynail on January 04, 2024, 12:13:39 pm ---Subaru is going in a bad direction.

--- End quote ---

From what I’ve read, all the manufacturers do it.

Those pre-2000 cars are looking better and better every day.

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