A car navigation system or car GPS device can record where a
car is located, but there is a little device in all of our cars that tracks everything
we do. Well… not everything but close
enough. This gadget is referred to as the vehicle’s Event Data Recorder
(EDR). The EDR works just like an
airplanes black box and is commonly used after an accident to see what
happened. It records at minimum of 15
aspects of a crash, including pre-crash speed, engine throttle, changes in
forward velocity and airbag deployment time.
All vehicles are mandated to have these black boxes by 2013,
but some cars have had these since the mid-90s.
The information collected could eventually be used for insurance
companies to set your insurance rates, as well as in civil and criminal
cases. Some people have said that this
information should be private but others say that if you are driving on public
roads than it is public information.
People very weary of this technology fear a future where a device like
this can issue a speeding ticket as soon as you go over the speed limit. Imagine a citation printing right out of your
dash. OK, so that’s a big jump, but you can see how people feel these devices
are a little “big brothery.”
Even though it does feel like an invasion of privacy I do
feel like this device can be used for good.
It will help auto companies fix problems with their vehicles that lead
to crashes. It will prove who was
actually at fault in an accident, so the wrong person doesn’t have to pay for
it.
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