Regina Leader-Post

Automakers allow state to track private vehicles

China steps up use of technology to make all electric carmakers track Chinese citizens

- ERIKA KINETZ

When Shan Junhua bought his white Tesla Model X, he knew it was a fast, beautiful car. What he didn’t know is that Tesla constantly sends informatio­n about the precise location of his car to the Chinese government.

Tesla is not alone. China has called upon all electric vehicle manufactur­ers in China to make the same kind of reports — potentiall­y adding to the rich kit of surveillan­ce tools available to the Chinese government as President Xi Jinping steps up the use of technology to track Chinese citizens.

“I didn’t know this,” said Shan. “Tesla could have it, but why do they transmit it to the government? Because this is about privacy.”

More than 200 manufactur­ers, including Tesla, Volkswagen, BMW, Daimler, Ford, General Motors, Nissan, Mitsubishi and U.s.-listed electric vehicle startup NIO, transmit position informatio­n and dozens of other data points to government-backed monitoring centres, The Associated Press has found. Generally, it happens without car owners’ knowledge.

The automakers say they are merely complying with local laws, which apply only to alternativ­e energy vehicles. Chinese officials say the data is used for analytics to improve public safety, facilitate industrial developmen­t and infrastruc­ture planning, and to prevent fraud in subsidy programs.

But other nations that are big markets for electronic vehicles — the U.S., Japan, across Europe — do not collect this kind of real-time data. And critics say the informatio­n collected in China is beyond what is needed to meet the country’s stated goals. It could be used not only to undermine foreign carmakers’ competitiv­e position, but also for surveillan­ce — particular­ly in China, where there are few protection­s on personal privacy. Under the leadership of Xi Jinping, China has unleashed a war on dissent, marshallin­g big data and artificial intelligen­ce to create a more perfect kind of policing, capable of predicting and eliminatin­g perceived threats to the stability of the ruling Communist Party.

There is also concern about the precedent these rules set for sharing data from next-generation connected cars, which may soon transmit even more personal informatio­n. “You’re learning a lot about people’s day-to-day activities and that becomes part of what I call ubiquitous surveillan­ce, where pretty much everything that you do is being recorded and saved and potentiall­y can be used in order to affect your life and your freedom,” said Michael Chertoff, who served as Secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security under president George W. Bush and recently wrote a book called Exploding Data.

Chertoff said global automakers should be asking themselves tough questions. “If what you’re doing is giving a government of a more authoritar­ian country the tools to have massive surveillan­ce, I think then companies have to ask themselves, ‘Is this really something we want to do in terms of our corporate values, even if it means otherwise forgoing that market?”’

The Shanghai Electric Vehicle Public Data Collecting, Monitoring and Research Center sits in a grey tower in suburban Jiading district. One floor up from the cafeteria, a wall-sized screen glows with dots, each representi­ng a single vehicle coursing along Shanghai’s roads to create a massive real-time map that could reveal where people live, shop, work, and worship.

Click a dot at random, and up pops a window with a number that identifies each individual vehicle, along with its make and model, mileage and battery charge.

All told, the screen exhibits data from over 222,000 vehicles in Shanghai, the vast majority of them passenger cars.

“We can provide a lot of data from consumers to the government to help them improve policy and planning,” said Ding Xiaohua, deputy director of the centre, a non-profit that is tightly aligned with and funded by the government.

According to national specificat­ions published in 2016, electric vehicles in China transmit data from the car’s sensors back to the manufactur­er. From there, automakers send at least 61 data points, including location and details about battery and engine function to local centres like the one Ding oversees in Shanghai.

Data also flows to a national monitoring centre for new energy vehicles run by the Beijing Institute of Technology, which pulls informatio­n from more than 1.1 million vehicles across the country, according to the National Big Data Alliance of New Energy Vehicles. The national monitoring centre declined to respond to questions.

Those numbers are about to get much bigger. Though electric vehicle sales accounted for just 2.6 per cent of the total last year, policy-makers have said they’d like new energy vehicles to account for 20 per cent of total sales by 2025. Starting next year, all automakers in China must meet production minimums for new energy vehicles, part of Beijing ’s aggressive bid to reduce dependence on foreign energy sources and place itself at the forefront of a growing global industry.

The Chinese government has shown its interest in tracking vehicles. “The government wants to know what people are up to at all times and react in the quickest way possible,” said Maya Wang, a senior China researcher for Human Rights Watch. “There is zero protection against state surveillan­ce.”

“Tracking vehicles is one of the main focuses of their mass surveillan­ce,” she added.

Last year, authoritie­s in Xinjiang, a restive region in western China that has become a laboratory for China’s surveillan­ce state, ordered residents to install GPS devices so their vehicles could be tracked, according to official media. This summer the Ministry of Public Security, a police agency, began to roll out a system to track vehicles using windshield radio frequency chips that can identify cars as they pass roadside reading devices.

Ding insisted that the electric vehicle monitoring program is not designed to facilitate state surveillan­ce, though he said data could be shared with government public security organs, if a formal request is made. The centre said it has not shared informatio­n with police, prosecutor­s or courts, but has used the data to assist a government investigat­ion of a vehicle fire.

There is a privacy firewall built into the system. The monitoring centre has each car’s unique vehicle identifica­tion number, but to link that number with the personal details of the car owner, it must go through the automaker — a step it has taken in the past. Chinese law enforcemen­t can also independen­tly link the vehicle identifica­tion number with the car owner’s personal informatio­n.

“To speak bluntly, the government doesn’t need to surveil through a platform like ours,” Ding said. He said he believed the security forces “must have their own ways to monitor suspects,” as other government­s do.

Many vehicles in the U.S., Europe and Japan transmit position data back to automakers, who feed it to car-tracking apps, maps that pinpoint nearby amenities and emergency services providers. But the data stops there. Government or law enforcemen­t agencies would generally only be able to access personal vehicle data in the context of a specific criminal investigat­ion and in the U.S. would typically need a court order, lawyers said.

Automakers initially resisted sharing data with the Shanghai monitoring centre; then the government made transmitti­ng data a prerequisi­te for getting incentives.

As cars become more connected, carmakers are looking to tap new revenue streams built on data — a market Mckinsey estimated could be worth $750 billion by 2030.

Ding said a Tesla executive came to Shanghai and grilled him about the rules. “The first question is who are you, the second question is why you collect this data, and the third question is how to protect the privacy of the users,” Ding said.

Tesla declined to comment.

Ding said confidenti­ality agreements bar the data centre from sharing proprietar­y informatio­n.

Still, he is open about his commercial ambition. He’d like to wean the centre from government funding and make money from the data, without infringing on anyone’s privacy or intellectu­al property. “We have done some exploratio­ns,” he said. “But there is still a distance from truly monetizing it.”

The Chinese government’s ability to grab data as it flows from cars gives its academics and policy-makers an edge over competing nations. China tends to view technology developmen­t as a key competitiv­e resource. Though global automakers have received billions in incentives and subsidies from U.S., European and Japanese government­s, they are contributi­ng data to the Chinese government that ultimately serves Beijing’s strategic interests.

Global automakers stressed that they share data to comply with Chinese regulation­s. Nearly all have plans to aggressive­ly expand their electric vehicle offerings in China, the world’s largest car market.

“There are real-time monitoring systems in China where we have to deliver car data to a government system,” Volkswagen Group China chief executive Jochem Heizmann said. He acknowledg­ed that he could not guarantee the data would not be used for government surveillan­ce, but stressed that Volkswagen keeps personal data secure within its own systems.

“It includes the location of the car, yes, but not who is sitting in it,” he said, adding that cars won’t reveal any more informatio­n than smart phones already do.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/AP FILES ?? Ding Xiaohua, deputy director of the Shanghai Electric Vehicle Public Data Collecting, Monitoring and Research Center, works with a data display screen in Shanghai. He says China’s electric vehicle monitoring program is not meant for state surveillan­ce, though he said data could be shared with government public security organs.
NG HAN GUAN/AP FILES Ding Xiaohua, deputy director of the Shanghai Electric Vehicle Public Data Collecting, Monitoring and Research Center, works with a data display screen in Shanghai. He says China’s electric vehicle monitoring program is not meant for state surveillan­ce, though he said data could be shared with government public security organs.
 ?? VINCENT YU/AP FILES ?? Automakers say they are merely complying with local laws when they share data with the Chinese government.
VINCENT YU/AP FILES Automakers say they are merely complying with local laws when they share data with the Chinese government.

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