Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States Communications Government Transportation

Government Won't Pursue Talking Car Mandate (apnews.com) 109

An anonymous reader shares an AP report: The Trump administration has quietly set aside plans to require new cars to be able to wirelessly talk to each other, auto industry officials said, jeopardizing one of the most promising technologies for preventing traffic deaths. The Obama administration proposed last December that all new cars and light trucks come equipped with technology known as vehicle-to-vehicle communications, or V2V. It would enable vehicles to transmit their location, speed, direction and other information 10 times per second. That lets cars detect, for example, when another vehicle is about to run a red light or coming around a blind turn in time to prevent a crash. The administration has decided not to pursue a final V2V mandate, said two auto industry officials who have spoken with White House and Transportation Department officials and two others whose organizations have spoken to the administration.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Government Won't Pursue Talking Car Mandate

Comments Filter:
  • Yes, let's just have cars broadcasting their speed. If you thought red light cameras were bad, this would have been worse.

    • If you're not speeding, then you've got nothing to hide!
      • by msauve ( 701917 )
        If I'm not speeding, there's no need to monitor me.
      • If you're not speeding, then you've got nothing to hide!

        If it's a public standard and you have the technical knowledge, even if you have something to hide, you can transmit data that says otherwise..

        "Well officer, what did the transponder report? Only 55 MPH? Isn't the speed limit 55? The radar says 70? I think your radar is wrong..."

        • One foot on the brake and one on the gas, hey!
          Well, there's too much traffic, I can't pass, no!
          So I tried my best illegal move
          Well, baby, black and white come and touched my groove again!
          Gonna write me up a 125
          Post my face wanted dead or alive
          Take my license, all that jive
          I can't drive 55! Oh No!
          Uh!
          So I signed my name on number 24, hey!
          Yeah the judge said, "Boy, just one more...
          We're gonna throw your ass in the city joint"
          Looked me in the eye, said, "You get my point?"
          I said Yea!, Oh yea!
          Write me up a 125
          Po

          • I never understood that song, but ..

            One foot on the brake and one on the gas, hey!

            ..I figured out why he wasn't able to get his vehicle up to 55 MPH. Get your fucking left foot off the brake pedal.

            In other news, there are many ways rock.

        • by Agripa ( 139780 )

          "Well officer, what did the transponder report? Only 55 MPH? Isn't the speed limit 55? The radar says 70? I think your radar is wrong..."

          An officer's guess is good enough for the court.

          https://www.techdirt.com/artic... [techdirt.com]

          • In the absence of independent witnesses or technical information, sure. The testimony of an officer trumps yours in traffic court everyday.

    • >"Yes, let's just have cars broadcasting their speed. If you thought red light cameras were bad, this would have been worse."

      Exactly. Much, much, much worse. And "about to run a red light" alert, so people can now just feel like running lights without worrying as much? (The law of unintended consequences). I am not anti-technology, but we need to be very, very careful when running into something like this. Perhaps each part needs to be examined individually for relevance, cost, privacy, and abuse pot

      • by Puls4r ( 724907 )
        Being careful doesn't even scratch the surface. We're talking about needing an unhackable wireless car to car communication system that allows free communication with any car that wanders into range, but is somehow able to ignore the fake signals that hackers will be sending within hours of the first car hitting the street.
        • You don't even need fake signals, just a transmitter (probably in the 1W range) broadcasting broad-spectrum noise strong enough to swamp the receiver of every car in a fifty-foot radius. And when cars can't signal their intentions to their neighbors, they won't be able to get away with following each other a sub-car-length distances. Additional mayhem is left as an exercise for the reader.

  • is now ...my Car, the Spy
  • Stupid Idea (Score:2, Interesting)

    by sycodon ( 149926 )

    May as well just put cameras in the cars too. If your going to fuck over privacy, might as well go all the way.

    And don't talk about Safety because when this was proposed...and even now, there is no system that would mitigate impending wrecks.

    Nope, I think they had something completely different in mind than Safety.

    • Re:Stupid Idea (Score:4, Informative)

      by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Wednesday November 01, 2017 @06:24PM (#55472561) Journal

      https://www.amazon.com/Best-Se... [amazon.com]

      You were saying?

      "They" don't have to put cameras in cars, "We" are doing it for "them"

      • I have a dash cam. It's terrific. It has a dedicated memory card, no WiFi, and does not integrate into the car's electronics. I am not doing anything for "them" if I own and directly control it myself.

        If my insurance company offered to give me a proprietary dash cam in exchange for a discount, I'd tell them to screw off. If car manufacturers make them standard equipment and don't let you control recording or retrieve video on your own, I'd be worried.

    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      "May as well just put cameras in the cars too."

      Hey, add a bit more and you could have a self-driving car! And, if you have self-driving cars, they shouldn't be speeding, or running red lights, or doing any of the other bad things which V2V is supposed to detect.
    • May as well just put cameras in the cars too.

      In some places, putting a camera in a car is about the only way to legally protect yourself in the case of an accident. Russians are famous for this, where insurance fraud is rife and local law enforcement won't be bothered to investigate such things without a bribe or two.

      So I've considered putting a camera in my car to record the craziness going on and hopefully counteract the idiot who is determined to lie about the cause of the accident and blame me.

      "Oh Yea Lighting McQueen? It was your fault and h

  • Here I was hoping for my own talking K.A.R.R. Oh well, there's always privacy breaching telemetry.
  • They'd never hire anyone capable of actually securing it anyway. They'd just hire Microsoft, who would backdoor it then outsource it to someplace in India, who would take money on the side to put backdoors in for China and Russia too, in the mean time accidentally leaking all 3 backdoors to the world, enraging NZ and the UK, who'd both paid for what they thought were exclusive backdoors, and while they're all fighting about it, someone will find a REAL vulnerability and exploit it unnoticed for decades.

  • People who live in rural areas would have little or no need for this. Think of driving ten or fifty miles on a two lane road to go to the store or visit a friend. I have stood in the middle of a road for twenty minutes eating a sandwich and didn't see a car or truck. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    • by Anonymous Coward
      On the other hand, I've been on curvy two-lane rural mountain roads where you can rarely see more than 100-200 yards of road at a time with locals routinely traveling at 50mph+ through 35mph zones using two throttle positions, where I had to swerve off the inside of a corner on a routine basis to avoid people cutting the corner of blind curves. These roads often have mirrors at corners because lives have been lost. The local high school usually lost a student or two every year on them. There might be rural
  • For preventing traffic accidents, the technology to let cars talk to each other is far behind self-driving car tech. Self driving cars will have a lot better sensors and reaction times than humans would, so they are already ahead... having cars talk each other only helps if EVERY car around is talking to each other, which may not happen for 20+ years even if it was mandated. In-between what happens to the poor cars around when the linked cars blindly decide to take some action?

    Nothing beats proper spacing

    • For preventing traffic accidents, the technology to let cars talk to each other is far behind self-driving car tech.

      Not true. Such technology is mandatory in larger aircraft, where it is called TCAS [wikipedia.org]. It is considered to be accurate enough that pilots are instructed to obey the TCAS warnings over the instructions of the human air traffic controllers.

      • TCAS technology is different, radar based. Larger planes have radar and look for other objects. Planes do not broadcast their position.

        Most planes (even gliders these days) have transponders that respond with a ping to being hit with radar. But they do not broadcast a position.

        Many pilots consider TCAS to be a nuisance because they are obliged to follow its instructions even though they can see the other plane and know that it is safe. This can actually lead to more dangerous behaviour. For example whe

        • TCAS technology is different, radar based. Larger planes have radar and look for other objects.

          Larger aircraft have weather radar. TCAS operates bases on the Mode S transponder signals that are interrogated either by ground radar or by the TCAS unit itself. The only significant difference between TCAS and this "cars talk to each other" system is that one is in the air and the other is on the ground.

          Most planes (even gliders these days) have transponders that respond with a ping to being hit with radar. But they do not broadcast a position.

          TCAS does not depend on ground radar. And yes, with the coming mandate for ADS-B Out, aircraft DO broadcast their positions.

          Many pilots consider TCAS to be a nuisance because they are obliged to follow its instructions even though they can see the other plane and know that it is safe.

          That would clear the conflict, then.

          This can actually lead to more dangerous behaviour.

          Then it would be the pilot increasing the d

          • by Anonymous Coward

            The other difference is that cars routinely operate within a closing distance where a collision avoidance system on planes would be shrieking.

            There is dramatically more buffer space around planes (even after taking into account their increased speed) and that includes stacking in 3D space where cars all have to share the same plane with vastly more intersection of trajectories.

            • The other difference is that cars routinely operate within a closing distance where a collision avoidance system on planes would be shrieking.

              That is a difference in a threshold value, not a significant technical difference. The basic concepts are the same. The technology isn't all that new.

              In fact, if anything, constricting the problem to fixed roadways and one elevation makes the problem simpler, not harder. TCAS has to deal with horizontal AND vertical tracks; car TCAS has only horizontal to worry about.

    • But because he proposed it, the left will scream that he is wrong.

  • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Wednesday November 01, 2017 @07:47PM (#55473059)
    I looked into some of the leading designs, and there is zero protection against surveillance or even consideration for privacy. You could literally set up passive beacon, collect IDs and speed readings, and connect it to a mailer to issue speeding tickets.
  • by JustNiz ( 692889 ) on Wednesday November 01, 2017 @09:16PM (#55473475)

    >> jeopardizing one of the most promising technologies for preventing traffic deaths.

    Using technology to get around the fact that Americans can and do get a driving licence despite being an awful, clueless driver is a shit idea that can't and doesn't address the core problem at all.

    The government needs to address the problem directly by mandating much stricter driving tests that include demonstrating an ability to actually be able to drive, such as controlling and handling a car well in all conditions, especially at the edge of performance. Just memorizing all the traffic signs/laws which is what they currently test for, in no way automatically makes anyone a good driver.

    At least here in AZ, the amount of distracted drivers texting while driving, and people that think its ok to never indicate even when very much cutting you off is a serious problem,

    The cops never seem to focus on stopping those people though, they only seem to penalize people that are actually driving safely other than exceeding the speed limit by a few mph.

    • In the US, many people need to drive a car for basic things, such as getting to work, the grocery store, medical appointments, etc. Any attempt to clear lots of people off the road because they're bad drivers would be a considerable hardship for many.

      Also, I'm a pretty safe driver nowadays. I'm not claiming to be a particularly good one, but I'm cautious enough to be safe. I wasn't always that way, and I benefit from decades of driving experience. If I wasn't allowed to drive, I wouldn't have a good

      • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

        Your assumption that you and others will necessarily be prevented from driving if the driving test gets stricter isn't a good one, because it presumes people are fundamentally incapable of learning.

        What do you think happens in say Western Europe where the driving tests are already much stricter? Still nearly everyone over there has a driving licence. The answer is you just have to make more of an effort to learn, but everyone can and does. To drive well takes schooling and being taught. Just driving for yea

        • I was unclear. I'm not cautious in the sense of driving slower than traffic. That's dangerous, as you say. I keep larger intervals than most people, wait for bigger gaps to turn into, that sort of thing.

  • >It would enable vehicles to transmit their location, speed, direction and other information 10 times per second.

    So my car is supposed to take another car's word about what it is doing? How long until someone else figures out how to make their car "lie" to watch the fun? It's guaranteed to happen. And will companies be continually updating these things, or are you just up a creek once your car is "obsolete" (aka when the warranty has expired and they want you to buy a new one).

  • There are already unauthorized traffic signal pre-emption systems that change red lights to green https://www.wired.com/2005/08/... [wired.com] The authorized versions are intended for fire/police/ambulance use. I could easily see somebody compromising the V2V system to broadcast a "get out of my way" message, to make their own commute faster. Even worse, overpower other cars' signals and cause accidents. Dumb computers, just following orders, could cause lots of deaths. Can I slip in a Godwin here?

We are each entitled to our own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts. -- Patrick Moynihan

Working...