Privacy Digest

News that can impact your privacy.
Login/Register
What is OpenID?
  • Log in using OpenID
  • Cancel OpenID login
  • Create new account
  • Request new password
Home Blogs MacRonin's blog
    • FAQ
    • Wishlists
    • Contact
    • Categories/RSS

Bookmark Us

Bookmark Privacy Digest 
Bookmark This Page 

Syndicate

Syndicate content
more

Advertisements

Tracking System
Tracking System
Private Detectives
Quality Security Services in California
Fleet Management
Hosting

Popular content

Last viewed:

  • Mr. Comey's Tale - washingtonpost.com
  • Kaliya Hamlin, Reid Hoffman, John Clippinger - Do You Know Where Your Identity Is?
  • Announcing the Spamhaus CSS (Composite Snow-Shoe SPAM)
  • Call Now - Senate to Vote on Habeas
  • Zango Accused of Violating FTC Agreement; Company Denies Allegations
  • Investigators: Businesses buying your credit card number
  • How can we help ?

tags in Topics

Activists Alert Anonymity Companies Congress Copyright Court (US) Databases Data Mining Editorial EFF Entertainment Exploits Fourth Amendment Government Hmmm ID Infrastructure Law Enforcement Laws Politics Privacy Remember Reports Rights Security Spin Zone Surveillance Telecommunications Tracking
more tags

View blog authority
Congressional Research
Broadcast Flag

Surveilling Drivers For Safety, For The Environment, and For Profit

Submitted by MacRonin on July 1, 2008 - 3:15pm
  • Activists
  • Alert
  • Companies
  • Databases
  • Editorial
  • EFF
  • GPS
  • Hmmm
  • Privacy
  • Remember
  • Spin Zone
  • Surveillance
  • Tracking

Surveilling Drivers For Safety, For The Environment, and For Profit - Via EFF.org Updates:

There is a growing movement to surveil the drivers of cars — for insurance purposes.

One idea is that vehicle insurance premiums should depend on verifiable, periodic measurements of how far a car has been driven. The case for such premiums is strong: driving further clearly increases the risk of an accident, and "Pay As You Drive" premiums would allow (some) drivers to pay less for insurance; would allow insurance companies to make higher profits; and would reduce the congestion, greenhouse emission and traffic accident costs that each mile driven causes for society.

Another idea is that vehicles should collect data on the way that they are being driven (location, speed, acceleration and braking patterns, type of roads, time of day, smoothness of steering, etc). These measurements can be used to identify good drivers, and offer them insurance discounts — or to spot dangerous drivers, charge them higher premiums and encourage them to take driving skills courses. The policy case for this kind of measurement may turn out to be strong too, though it is less well-established.

The problem with these proposals is that they are often accompanied by a technical proposal for a tracking device that sits in your car and transmits voluminous data over wireless or satellite links, so that insurance companies can decide how much to charge you. Many modern vehicles are already collecting this information, and the insurance industry just needs to get a copy of it.

One state currently considering these schemes is California. The State's Department of Insurance held a workshop last week on how best to modify existing regulations to implement Pay As You Drive insurance. EFF participated in the process; you can read our letter to the Department (written with Andrew Blumberg at Stanford) here.

Briefly, EFF's view is that there is a perfectly good, ubiquitous and tamper-resistant device avaialable for measuring vehicle mileage: the odometer. It may be good policy to require fine-grained dependence of insurance premiums upon mileage — but if so, the data should be collected by examining odometers rather than 24/7 wireless or satellite surveillance. We think the public agrees: a similar tracking scheme by UK insurer Norwich Union was abandoned this week.

The best way to protect drivers' privacy, of course, is to not record any facts about where and when and how they are driving at all. But in the long run, there may be sound policy cases for devices that spot dangerous drivers, or charge road tolls based on congestion, etc. If policy-makers are persuaded that there is a strong need for such systems, they need to be built in a way that has the minimal possible privacy consequences. Cryptography offers many ways to implement these kinds of schemes without compromising locational privacy (one technical example is described in this paper). The general principle is that only the minimal amount of information should leave the vehicle: the total billable amount, for instance. If verification is an issue, cryptography and some extra hardware can provide it.

If governments are persuaded that they should allow insurers or anybody else to use detailed information on location or other vehicle observations, they should mandate that these schemes not upload any information from vehicles except for the premium itself, and they should require that the privacy properties of any technology being proposed for vehicles be audited by the computer security community before it is deployed.

If we let insurance companies, car manufacturers or tech companies build a gigantic driver surveillance system, it will be exceedingly difficult to go back to the days where you could drive to a church, or a gay bar, or a political meeting, or a cheap motel at lunchtime, without some company (or hacker) permanently recording that fact.

(Read Original Article - Via EFF.org Updates.)

Bookmark/Search this post with:
  • Twitter Twitter
  • Digg Digg
  • StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Technorati
  • del.icio.us del.icio.us
  • Facebook Facebook
  • Furl Furl
  • LinkedIn LinkedIn
  • Yahoo Yahoo
  • MacRonin's blog
  • Add new comment

Recent blog posts

  • In Bid to Sway Sales, Cameras Track Shoppers
  • Unprecedented 25-Year Sentence Sought for TJX Hacker
  • EFF Appeals Dismissal of Warrantless Wiretapping Case
  • Viacom Makes Its Case Against Yesterday's YouTube
  • Obama supports Senators draft plan to rework U.S. immigration policy - Includes National Biometric ID card for all.
  • Domain Names Can't Defend Themselves
  • Hacker Disables More Than 100 Cars Remotely
  • Judges Approves $9.5 Million Facebook ‘Beacon’ Accord
  • Hooking Up The Big Brother Machine... And Fighting It
  • Court: State Can Dump Non-Sex Offenders Into Registry
more

Performancing Metrics

Compilation © Copyright 1997-2010 Paul Hardwick, with Web Hosting provided by MacRonin.com.