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Canada The Courts Apple

Woman Looking At Apple Watch Found Guilty of Distracted Driving (nationalpost.com) 128

Ontario law defines distracted driving as "holding or using a handheld wireless communication device" -- and a judge just fined Victoria Ambrose $400 for checking her Apple Watch while waiting at a stoplight. Long-time Slashdot reader innocent_white_lamb quotes the National Post: Even with its miniaturization and trendy technology, an Apple Watch is no safer "than a cellphone taped to someone's wrist," said a justice of the peace, while convicting a Guelph woman this month of holding or using a hand-held wireless communication device while driving... "The key to determining this matter is distraction. It is abundantly clear from the evidence that Ms. Ambrose was distracted..."
When the light turned green Ambrose had remained parked at an intersection, according to the officer who ticketed her, though two cars ahead of her had moved forward. Ambrose testified that she was only checking the time, but the officer told the court he'd seen Ambrose check her watch four different times.
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Woman Looking At Apple Watch Found Guilty of Distracted Driving

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  • by ITRambo ( 1467509 ) on Saturday June 02, 2018 @02:44PM (#56716778)
    Clearly, she wanted to know if the time had changed from a few seconds before, because cars don't have things like clocks on the dashboard.
    • ... because cars don't have things like clocks on the dashboard.

      Not defending her, but the LCD display on the radio (also the clock) in my 2001 Honda Civic is now unreadable during the day, and *barely* readable at night. The LCD panel seems to be working, and I think the problem is with the plastic/acrylic. Could be from age and heat over 17 years. In any case, I don't have a visible clock in my car and would have to check my cell phone to know the time. And, yes, it's bitch re-programming the stations after disconnecting the battery.

      • The dash clock in my 1991 Honda Civic is still working perfectly. I'm not sure what display technology it uses, it's seven segment like LED clock displays but it's close to white which I don't think we had in LED 27 years ago.

        It also dims nicely at night when I put the lights on, as does, somehow, the display on the Pioneer DAB radio I had put in.

        If only they still built 'em like they used to....

  • The lever is handheld and it communicates my intentions wirelessly to other road users. If I ever get pulled over for not using it, I will have a good argument to defend myself.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      That is monumentally idiotic. A judge would say the same. Do you have to take your eyes off the road to operate your turn signal, which is also a vital part of operating a motor vehicle? Enjoy eating your windshield when you plow into the back of someone while scrolling your libertarian news blogs.

    • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Saturday June 02, 2018 @03:31PM (#56716996) Journal

      The lever is handheld and it communicates my intentions wirelessly to other road users. If I ever get pulled over for not using it, I will have a good argument to defend myself.

      I hear judges are very sympathetic to people representing themselves who try to get clever. Please let us know how it goes!

    • If you have to look at it to use it, then you probably need more driving practice.

    • I know you're just being a troll, but:

      Societies are built on the concept of managing and evaluating risk.

      Our society has determined that the very slight risk required by a driver, who is presumably holding the steering wheel correctly, to lift one or two fingers off of that wheel, flick them slightly up and down, then put their fingers back on the wheel, is far outweighed by the positive benefits of communicating your driving intentions to other drivers on the road.

      Conversely, we've now decided that the ris

      • Excuse me, that should read 'is NOT outweighed by the mild positive benefit of that driver seeing what Kim Kardashian.....'
  • Isn't the car radio responsible for for displaying CallerID and time these days?

  • Guelph ?? Canada sure is a strange country.
  • What she was looking at/using should have 0 bearing on this considering "when the light turned green Ambrose had remained parked at an intersection."

    I don't care if someone's looking at the sky, people who do this shit deserve a distracted driving ticket, and there's a special place in hell for people who do this and make you wait through multiple light cycles.

  • Apple devices aren't capable of wireless communication.

  • This reminds me of the need to separate texting while stopped and texting while moving offences.

  • IMHO, the important consideration here is that she wasn't just ticketed for checking her watch, but she failed to respond to the light turning green, while checking her watch. Seems like this is good use of police discretion, in that she first exhibited symptoms of distraction, and only then did the officer determine what the distraction was, and ticket her accordingly.

    Having been given a ticket for looking at my phone when driving (when I absolutely had not been doing so), I appreciate the idea that the w

  • She technically would fail a driving exam for such behavior, as would many drivers for other common driving inattentiveness. She was stopped and often drivers while stopped take time to adjust temperature, check navigation , sip a beverage etc... all reasonable activities. A delay at the light is not a major danger to others. $50 plus the hassle of getting pulled over and insurance implications should be enough wake up call to her and others. The lady lied or is unfit to drive if she thinks checking time
  • This is absurd. We shouldn't be penalizing people for looking at devices when they are STOPPED at a light. This will only encourage people to play with the devices when their vehicles are in motion and police are less likely to see them doing it.

    When the hell did common sense go out the window?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      In point of fact, she was stopped at a green light.

    • When the hell did common sense go out the window?

      When did it become common sense to be stopped at a green light?

    • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

      If the engine's running, you're in control. Most of our distracted driving charges happen at stop lights. But, if your phone's out, you're almost certainly using it while moving, too.

    • by Strider- ( 39683 ) on Saturday June 02, 2018 @09:19PM (#56718262)

      Two words: "Situational Awareness". Stop at a red light, fiddle with your phone. You have now just lost awareness of what's going on in the intersection. Light turns green, you miss it, person behind you taps their horn. Quick: did the person turning left make it out of the intersection, is the elderly lady still in the crosswalk? Unless you're far more disciplined than 99% of the population you're not likely going to take the time to see what's going on, you're just going to react to the person honking at you.

      That's why you don't fuck with your phone at a stop light.

  • by Murdoch5 ( 1563847 ) on Saturday June 02, 2018 @08:03PM (#56718056) Homepage
    The problem was she didn't drive forwards on a green light, and has nothing to do with the Apple Watch. If she drove forward when she should of, then nothing would happened. Stop making this about the watch and make it about the total lack of driver responsibility.
  • Just waiting for people to get ticketed for checking their speed. We need some clear definition of what "distracted" is.

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