Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Smart Cars That Share Revealing Info About Drivers Catch Privacy Watchdog's Eye

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jan, 2016 01:04 PM
  • Smart Cars That Share Revealing Info About Drivers Catch Privacy Watchdog's Eye
OTTAWA — The family car is learning more about who's behind the wheel — everything from where a driver likes to shop to how hard they brake — as automakers roll out new tech-savvy features.
 
With cars collecting and even sharing more personal data, Canada's privacy watchdog is quietly trying to ensure manufacturers, retailers and insurance companies avoid bumps on the virtual highway.
 
On-board navigation systems can tell where a vehicle is and where it has been. Electronic components stream data to computers that gauge driver behaviour and the car's roadworthiness. Vehicles recognize drivers and adjust settings for them. Infotainment systems allow voice and data communications.
 
"With connectivity, cars are becoming highly efficient data harvesting machines," says a 2015 study by the British Columbia Freedom of Information and Privacy Association.
 
Customer data generated by the connected car is now seen as a major new source of revenue for marketers and advertisers, the study found. Some insurance companies are offering coverage that sets premiums based on driving patterns.
 
When tracked, combined or linked with other available data, the information can reveal intensely private details of a person's life, making it vulnerable to abuse by thieves, stalkers and others with malicious intent, the study says.
 
It argues automakers have failed to comply with their obligations under Canadian privacy law when it comes to giving customers adequate information and choice about how their data is collected and used.
 
The study recommends creation of data-protection regulations for the connected car and insurance industries, as well as involvement of privacy experts in the design stage of wired-vehicle research projects.
 
The federal privacy commissioner's office, which financially supported the B.C. study, is "actively following" the issues and has held discussions with industry players and provincial regulators, said Valerie Lawton, a spokeswoman for the commissioner.
 
The Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers Association, which represents the country's largest car-makers, initiated a meeting with the federal commissioner's office last June, say notes disclosed under the Access to Information Act.
 
Federal privacy officials saw it as an opportunity to get a better sense of the information collected by intelligent cars, what might be coming, and whether manufacturers were fully aware of their obligations, the notes indicate.
 
Legal and regulatory requirements are considered whenever car-makers look at introducing new technologies with privacy implications, said Mark Nantais, manufacturers association president.
 
"We're fully compliant — and intend to be fully compliant — with the laws that are applicable," he said in an interview.
 
As for insurance-related data, that's a relationship between the driver and their insurance company that goes beyond the automaker, Nantais said.
 
The internal notes from the privacy commissioner paint a futuristic scenario involving in-car advertising — for instance, a near-empty gas-tank sensor could project an advisory on the windshield offering the driver a discount at a nearby filling station.
 
Nantais, however, played down the notion wired cars produce a bounty of valuable information.
 
"Is it myth or reality that the data actually exists? That's a valid question," he said. "Some people think that everything under the sun is available, and I don't think that's the case."
 
As vehicles become increasingly reliant on technology, security will be paramount, Nantais added.
 
"We want to make sure that those vehicles cannot be hacked and that they remain safe," he said. "And there's a lot of work going on in the industry relative to cyber security of vehicles, primarily from a safety perspective."

MORE National ARTICLES

2015 The Year Streaming 'Went Mainstream,' Viewers Hope For More Options In '16

2015 The Year Streaming 'Went Mainstream,' Viewers Hope For More Options In '16
TORONTO — Whenever Anushie Mahavitane gets a chance to watch TV, the busy working mom has a choice to make: Will it be live, on-demand or streamed?

2015 The Year Streaming 'Went Mainstream,' Viewers Hope For More Options In '16

Pressure-Cooker Emergency Crises Get High-Tech Solution From Vancouver Startup

Pressure-Cooker Emergency Crises Get High-Tech Solution From Vancouver Startup
The CommandWear Systems' platform has been piloted and used by several police and paramedics agencies across Canada since the company was launched in June 2013.

Pressure-Cooker Emergency Crises Get High-Tech Solution From Vancouver Startup

California Mother Takes Fight To Federal Court To Have Brain-Dead Daughter Declared Alive

California Mother Takes Fight To Federal Court To Have Brain-Dead Daughter Declared Alive
Lawyers for the mother of 13-year-old Jahi McMath filed a lawsuit in San Francisco federal court asking that the girl be declared alive after state courts have refused to rescind the teen's death certificate.

California Mother Takes Fight To Federal Court To Have Brain-Dead Daughter Declared Alive

Fentanyl Blamed In One Death And Two Overdoses In Owen Sound, Ontario

OWEN SOUND, Ont. — Police say fentanyl is the cause of three recent overdoses in Owen Sound, Ont., that caused the death of one person and the hospitalization of two others.

Fentanyl Blamed In One Death And Two Overdoses In Owen Sound, Ontario

Red Cross To Take Over Meals On Wheels Program In Eastern Newfoundland

Red Cross To Take Over Meals On Wheels Program In Eastern Newfoundland
Meals on wheels was offered by the Victorian Order of Nurses and was supposed to end permanently in St. John's on Wednesday.

Red Cross To Take Over Meals On Wheels Program In Eastern Newfoundland

Doctors In Saskatchewan Worried About Spike In Crystal Meth Problems

Doctors In Saskatchewan Worried About Spike In Crystal Meth Problems
SASKATOON — At least one Saskatchewan health official says fire evacuations in the north during the summer created more crystal meth problems which in turn are making the HIV situation in the province even worse.

Doctors In Saskatchewan Worried About Spike In Crystal Meth Problems