Windsor Star

Big Brother wants to keep tabs on you inside your car

Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they’re not after you, David Booth writes.

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OK, this one hits home. You see, I am a little, well, security conscious. Not Joseph Heller paranoid, but were my significan­t other describing me, the word would be “cautious.” I pay a few small bills online, but my main bank accounts are way off the grid. I still insist on depositing my cheques in person, I don’t ever “tap” my credit card and what little financial/work/ corporate interactio­n I do online requires a re-confirmati­on code through my cellphone. Business Insider posted a story that says a company called Nest has surreptiti­ously built microphone­s into its products. In this case home security systems, but it also famously makes Wi-Fi-enabled thermostat­s. And it has done so without informing anyone.

It’s not mentioned in any of its marketing brochures. There’s no mention of a mic on its product page. No one knew. Certainly, I didn’t know (says he, staring at the Nest thermostat).

I know you’re thinking, ‘What’s with all this Catch-22 nonsense? Who cares if some little Silicon Valley upstart has a few details of how warm you like your house and can listen in to conversati­ons in your kitchen?’

Except Nest isn’t just a little startup. It is owned by Google. Yes, that Google. The same Google that claimed its geodata-collecting Street View cars “accidental­ly” collected emails from our personal, home-based Wi-Fi networks as they drove by. The same Google that owns Waymo, the world’s leading proponent of the completely autonomous automobile.

So yes, you’re getting my drift; the same company that wants to know your whereabout­s when you’re away from home now also wants to listen to your every conversati­on when you’re safely ensconced in said home. The big question is what we, the consuming public, are going to do about it.

Probably nothing, unfortunat­ely. Paranoia about privacy seems to be a generation­al concern. Boomers fret about it continuous­ly. But millennial­s and Gen Xers, who are already posting pictures of their underwear — or lack thereof — on pretty much every website? Not so much. The general public seems to simply shrug off invasions of privacy that would have, just 20 years ago, been deemed unconscion­able.

And a controvers­y regarding peeping thermostat­s pales in comparison with the informatio­nal intrusion that our future’s connected car promises. I’m not talking about the paltry millions they’ll charge us directly — at $15 or so a month — for our OnStar and BlueLink informatio­nal services. No, I’m talking about the billions to be made monetizing the informatio­n we’ll generate transmitti­ng data from our vehicles.

The informatio­n our cars produce will be sold. Our infotainme­nt screens will become plagued with more advertisin­g than our TVs. With a captive audience, what marketing maven wouldn’t jump at the chance to advertise its pizza to hungry travellers or gasoline/tires/service to motorists whose cars are continuous­ly pumping out data detailing how long it’s been since they’ve been tuned up or how empty their gas tanks are? Even much ballyhooed safety devices will be monetized. It’s not a huge entreprene­urial leap to imagine all those drowsiness sensors to be sponsored by the roadside motel chains. And would Mr. Days Inn be willing to pay a little extra if we made those sensors a little more, um, sensitive to sleepiness behind the wheel?

Too much? Automakers would never do anything so underhande­d, you say? Have we really forgotten how greedy car companies are? Volkswagen sold our environmen­t down the river to save a few hundred bucks per car in diesel emissions hardware. Even back when Ford decided against relocating/reinforcin­g the Pinto’s gas tanks — which, I will remind you, exploded upon impact — it was so it could save the measly $11 a car it would have cost to re-engineer its four-wheel time bomb. Sell us out for the estimated US$750-billion McKinsey & Company says that “car data monetizati­on” will produce by 2030? They’re setting up divisions to do it as we speak. Remember all that data Google “accidental­ly” gathered with its cars? The company claims its antennas were just trying to use our personal Wi-Fi networks for location services and it unknowingl­y — completely without intent, mind you — gathered “payload” data as well.

I’m not sure I believe them.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Remember when Google — the same Google that owns Waymo — claimed its geodata-collecting Street View cars “accidental­ly” collected emails from our personal, home-based Wi-Fi networks as they drove by?
ERIC RISBERG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Remember when Google — the same Google that owns Waymo — claimed its geodata-collecting Street View cars “accidental­ly” collected emails from our personal, home-based Wi-Fi networks as they drove by?

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