Ford Eyes Use of Customers' Personal Data To Boost Profits (threatpost.com) 79
According to industry-watchers, Ford is looking to profit off the data it can collect from its 100 million customers. In addition to the data collected from its infotainment systems and mobile apps, "Ford's CEO recently suggested that the data collected by the company's financial services arm also represents a valuable, low-overhead asset," reports Threatpost. From the report: "We have 100 million people in vehicles today that are sitting in Ford blue-oval vehicles," said Ford CEO Jim Hackett during a Freakonomics Radio podcast. "The issue in the vehicle, see, is: We already know and have data on our customers. By the way, we protect this securely; they trust us. We know what people make. How do we know that? It's because they borrow money from us. And when you ask somebody what they make, we know where they work, you know. We know if they're married. We know how long they've lived in their house because these are all on the credit applications. We've never ever been challenged on how we use that. And that's the leverage we got here with the data."
The comments, which were amplified by several auto-industry sources and the Detroit Free Press, sparked alarm in the Twitterverse. Against the backdrop of privacy disasters at Facebook and other stalwarts of the internet economy, the fear for many is that Ford sees selling access to consumers based on their lifestyle as a way forward. Is Ford considering selling consumer data as a revenue stream? Hackett stopped short of saying that -- and indeed, the data could instead simply be useful to the company internally, as a way to increase the value (and profit) of its other businesses.
The comments, which were amplified by several auto-industry sources and the Detroit Free Press, sparked alarm in the Twitterverse. Against the backdrop of privacy disasters at Facebook and other stalwarts of the internet economy, the fear for many is that Ford sees selling access to consumers based on their lifestyle as a way forward. Is Ford considering selling consumer data as a revenue stream? Hackett stopped short of saying that -- and indeed, the data could instead simply be useful to the company internally, as a way to increase the value (and profit) of its other businesses.
CEOs are sociopaths (Score:5, Insightful)
Every last one of them. That he would make such comments in the middle of the current privacy scandals shows an incredible lack of sensitivity and respect for their customers.
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So you want them to be quiet and do it?
If you don't think this has been going on for decades, then you're an idiot.
Re: CEOs are sociopaths (Score:2)
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Connected cars haven't existed for "decades" in the sense they do now.
They mostly still don't exist. Most cars, and even most new cars, do not have tracking built in. Specifically, Ford cars don't. There is "Ford Sync" that can track you, but only if you install the app, and plug your phone into the console while you are driving.
Credit data? Sure.
This is what he is referring to: Data collected while processing credit applications.
Car companies have been financing cars for 30 years. For many years, GM made more money from loans than from manufacturing.
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The ford CEO is talking primarily about loan data. The rest of that data can already be collected from your smart-whatever, cars have had GPS and remote data connections since early 2000s as well as on board car computers that the dealers with their "free service during the warranty period/10y/forever (Ford/GM/VAG/Hyundai/Honda etc all have it)" can download and send to the manufacturer.
Things are getting more detailed and more on demand, but you're deluded if you think data collections are a new thing.
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In almost all organizations, someone has the responsibility to lead that organization. Whether the name remains "CEO" or not, the function is there. By proposing that all CEOs be annihilated, you propose that humans have no organizations, no organized activity, no cooperation between people.
You're an enemy of humanity, an idiot, or most likely both.
Re: CEOs are sociopaths (Score:2)
Bullshit (Score:1)
https://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/press/news/170615-0
http://www.inspection.gc.ca/food/meat-and-poultry-products/manual-of-procedures/chapter-4/annex-c/eng/1370525150531/1370525354148
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Wallstreet is the sociopath we need to be conce
Re: Ha... (Score:3)
Re: Ha... (Score:2)
Not me (Score:2)
Re: Not me (Score:2)
Re: In car wifi (Score:2)
Re: Ford and the Jews? (Score:2)
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Old Henry was also a big admirer of Hitler...
It was mostly the other way around. Adolf was a big admirer of Henry Ford. Ford was the only American mentioned favorably in Mein Kampf.
Henry Ford was an antisemite [wikipedia.org], but he was also a pacifist and did not believe in violence. He explicitly condemned the Nazi attacks on the Jews in the 1930s.
Of course, none of this has anything to do with Ford Motor Company today.
Fuck Ford... (Score:3)
Re: Fuck Ford... (Score:3)
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Re: Fuck Ford... (Score:2)
Re:Fuck Ford... (Score:4, Informative)
Why don't you just demand laws to stop this kind of thing? We have them in Europe. My Leaf had a 3G modem, and if I didn't agree to sharing data every time I started the car no data would be shared. If Nissan did share it I could complain to the data regulator, they could be fined a percentage of global turnover etc.
Actually I can answer my own question. Corporations write your laws and own your politicians, which means they own you.
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No IoT for me (Score:5, Insightful)
Not all customers (Score:1)
finance. I've never financed a car, ever. If I cannot afford a new car, I do not buy one. So they will NOT know how much I make, or where I work. Frankly, all that info is in the credit reporters, and they sell it already. So sorry ford, you have been beaten to the punch. They can track your location, but so does google/apple. So again, nothing new. Pretty soon it is going to be a buyers market for data. You want to buy data, well car company, make me an offer better than google. Google make me a better off
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Ford's privacy policy specifically says that they can give your driver information to your insurance company. That info isn't anonymized.
Like to speed? Have to hit the brakes too hard too often? Be prepared to pay extra for that.
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I didn't think I could hate Ford more than I do (Score:4, Interesting)
I was wrong.
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I don't know anything about Toyota's quality, but if you are disappointed, try Honda or Honda-owned Acura. We are happy Honda/Acura owners.
Good luck.
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Now at Toyota. Hoping for the best.
Toyota actually improve over time.
The Toyota Way [wikipedia.org]
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Toyota has been on a long downhill side. They peaked sometime in the mid-90's. The 1992-1996 Camry is probably the best car they'll ever build. Nowadays they seem complacent, assuming that they can build whatever and people will buy it because it has a Toyota badge on it. That's not to say Toyotas are bad cars if you can put with the increasingly bizarre styling, but the years of decontenting is obvious.
The ones to keep an eye on are the Koreans as they seem to be trying really hard and they've made hug
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Great way to kill sales. (Score:2)
Well, congratulations Ford. Well, you've assured I will not purchase a car from you. What a stupid negative marketing move. Gee, who will want to finance through you from now on. Especially since this is one of your big money makers.
Re: Great way to kill sales. (Score:2)
Why the sudden concern? (Score:1)
So people are up in arms about automakers collecting location data, but OK with cell phones, Facebook, etc. doing the same thing?
Idiots (Score:1)
Watch their stock drop like a rock now. Over the years Ford has made a lot of very bad decisions like this one. I remember Ford ambulances spontaneously exploding after they were run hard (this was in the late 80's). It was caused by thin cheap low-carbon metal gas tanks and exhaust system parts. They had the same attitude about it as with the Pinto - it's cheaper to pay burn death victims's families that it is to fix their crappy vehicles.
I read Ford's privacy policy... (Score:3)
...for their Vehicle Health Report Service and swore that I'd never use it. They don't/won't disclose the data they collect nor what they'll use it for (Summary: "We reserve the right to do anything we want with the data that gets uploaded"), and I swore that I'd never buy a Ford again. Reading TFA makes that even more of a promise.
(Yes, other companies may be as bad, but they haven't pissed me off like Ford has. Orphaning the the MS MyFord Touch system WHILE THE CAR WAS STILL UNDER WARRANTY was unforgivable.)
Fords "Dumb Fucks" Moment. (Score:2)
That 1983 Rx7 GSL is starting to look mighty yummy (Score:2)
Rope and pulley, carburated, manual choke, direct connection from toe to brakes (with hydraulics in the middle)
No GPS, no wifi, no CAN, no CPUs, no ECUs, No data. NO CARRIER
Just a light nimble little tincan with 4 wheels and 2 seats. I don't need anything more.
Fuck this modern data-sucking privacy-invading life. Fuck it hard and long, with a splintered phone pole.
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Rotary engines are crap. Get a pre-1996 240sx instead.
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Insert foot into mouth (Score:2)
We already know and have data on our customers. By the way, we protect this securely; they trust us.
Not any more.