Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In China, automakers send government electric-car data

- ERIKA KINETZ

SHANGHAI — Global automakers are feeding realtime location informatio­n and dozens of other data points from electric vehicles to Chinese government monitoring centers, potentiall­y adding to China’s rich kit of surveillan­ce tools as President Xi Jinping steps up the use of technology to track Chinese citizens. Generally, it happens without car owners’ knowledge, The Associated Press found.

More than 200 automakers selling electric vehicles in China — including Tesla, Volkswagen, BMW, Daimler, Ford, General Motors, Nissan, Mitsubishi and U.S.-listed startup NIO — send at least

61 data points to government­backed monitoring platforms, under rules published in 2016.

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

But critics say the informatio­n collected exceeds those goals and could be used to undermine foreign carmakers’ competitiv­e position, or for surveillan­ce. Under Xi’s leadership, China has unleashed a war on dissent, marshallin­g big data and artificial intelligen­ce to create a more perfect kind of policing that can quickly neutralize 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,” said Michael Chertoff, who was secretary of the Department of Homeland Security under President George W. Bush and wrote the book Exploding Data. “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?’”

At the Shanghai Electric Vehicle Public Data Collecting, Monitoring and Research Center, a wall-size screen glows with dots. Each represents one of more than 222,000 vehicles connected to the system, coursing along Shanghai’s roads to create a large real-time map that could reveal where people live, shop, work and worship.

Data also flow to a national monitoring center run by the Beijing Institute of Technology, which pulls informatio­n from

more than 1.1 million new-energy vehicles. Those numbers are about to get much bigger, as Beijing pushes electric-vehicle developmen­t as part of its “Made in China 2025” industrial developmen­t plan.

Ding Xiaohua, the deputy director of the Shanghai center, said monitoring is not designed to facilitate state surveillan­ce, though data can be shared with police, prosecutor­s or courts if a formal request is made. The center is registered as a nonprofit but is tightly aligned with and funded by the government.

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

“To speak bluntly, the government doesn’t need to surveil through a platform like ours,” Ding said.

Many vehicles in the U.S., Europe and Japan transmit position informatio­n back to automakers, who feed it to car-tracking apps, maps that pinpoint nearby amenities and emergency services providers. But the data transmissi­on stops there. Government or law enforcemen­t agencies would generally only be able to access 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 informatio­n with the Shanghai monitoring center; then the government made transmitti­ng data a prerequisi­te for getting incentives.

“They gave you dozens of reasons why they can’t give you the data,” said a government consultant who helped evaluate the policy and spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive issues. “Then we offer the incentives. Then they want to give us the data because it’s part of their profit.”

There was concern the shared data might reveal proprietar­y informatio­n about, for example, how hybrids switch between gas and battery power, and eventually set automakers up for commercial competitio­n with a Chinese government entity.

Ding said confidenti­ality agreements protect proprietar­y company informatio­n. Still, he is open about his desire to make money from the data. “We have done some exploratio­ns,” he said. “But there is still a distance from truly monetizing it.”

China’s ability to grab data as it flows from cars gives it an edge. 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 China that ultimately serves Beijing’s strategic interests.

Automakers stressed they share data to comply with Chinese law and they obtain consent from car owners.

Standing beside his white Tesla Model X, Shan Junhua said he might not have bought the car if he’d known its journeys were being recorded.

 ?? AP ?? Ding Xiaohua describes his work as deputy director of the Shanghai Electric Vehicle Public Data Collecting, Monitoring and Research Center in Shanghai, one of several Chinese government monitoring centers that gather real-time data transmitte­d by electric vehicles.
AP Ding Xiaohua describes his work as deputy director of the Shanghai Electric Vehicle Public Data Collecting, Monitoring and Research Center in Shanghai, one of several Chinese government monitoring centers that gather real-time data transmitte­d by electric vehicles.

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