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United States Government Transportation

Digital License Plates Are Now Allowed in Michigan (theverge.com) 193

Digital license plates are now allowed in Michigan thanks to a new state law. It will join California and Arizona as one of the few states in the US that allow digital license plates, allowing drivers to register their cars electronically and eschew old-school metal plates. From a report: To be clear, digital license plates consist of displays covered in glass that are mounted onto a frame. They come with their own computer chips and wireless communication systems. Some of the benefits of using digital licenses versus old metal ones are the ability to display Amber alerts or stolen vehicle messages when needed, but they could also make it easier to digitally renew license plates over the years. That comes at a price, though. Currently, they cost $499 for a basic version, and $799 for a premium version that features a GPS navigation add-on.
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Digital License Plates Are Now Allowed in Michigan

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  • by Cajun Hell ( 725246 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @12:52PM (#57982228) Homepage Journal
    I'm keeping my license plate analog. If my license plate were to have discrete letters and digits, that would just make it easier for cops to identify me.
    • True, however, license plates will eventually go away. It will cost more for an analog plate, very much like smart meters
  • by spazmonkey ( 920425 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @12:52PM (#57982232)
    Seems like the ability to always know your location and/or shut off your ability to legally drive if you have unpaid tickets, warrants, or some other infraction is the only real advantage. I am sure banks will use this for people behind in payments too. I see no consumer advantage to this at all, but we get to pay extra for it.
    • Since the plate is remotely programmed, there may be the ability to have it flash in bright colors to draw attention to your vehicle for whatever reason.
    • by rjune ( 123157 )

      Based on the size of the unit, it looks like there is plenty of room to add the capability to record not only your current location, but a record of where and when you traveled, along with the speeds. What a treasure trove of information to be exploited, stolen, and misused. All paid for by you! My plate will be NFW-999 (No F****** Way Ever!)

  • by Puls4r ( 724907 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @12:53PM (#57982236)
    I have yet to see a single coherent argument for digital license plates. They cost a ton, have wireless (means they can be hacked), batteries will die....just so many many reasons. They are totally WORTHLESS for displaying amber alerts. Whichever idiot came up with that should be shitcanned now. You can't read license plates half the time right now because of dirt or covers or - reasons. Now you're what - going to obscur my license plate number and flash different colors? And you think the guy behind me is going to give a shit? Or read it?

    I could go on and on. But pretty much everyone agrees this is a horrible idea that has it's roots in yet another way to track people.
    • by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:08PM (#57982322)

      They are totally WORTHLESS for displaying amber alerts.

      Typically, the police are looking for a particular vehicle during an Amber alert.

      They idea is not to show that Amber alert on other people's cars. It's to make the target vehicle's license plate blink/flash/otherwise draw attention to the vehicle.

      • by chuckugly ( 2030942 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:16PM (#57982374)
        So all we have to do is get all the kiddie fiddlers to buy $500 plates. Well on second thought, brilliant!
        • If you can get them to shell out $799 for the premium version, they can report their GPS coordinates to the authorities as well.

        • by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:25PM (#57982442)

          The Amber alert angle is designed to sell the plates to the state government, who would then mandate them on cars. Or as a reason for someone like GM to integrate them into the car for OnStar's "we stop the bad guys" angle.

          If they were mandated, presumably the cost would be lower due to the large volume produced. For now, it's a very niche product so it's expensive.

          • by taustin ( 171655 )

            If they were mandated, presumably the cost would be lower due to the large volume produced.

            You might presume that, and possibly there will even be places where it'd happen. In California, they'd make you get a separate license for it, and slap a tax on top of that.

        • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:29PM (#57982470)

          So all we have to do is get all the kiddie fiddlers to buy $500 plates.

          So the next obvious step is to mandate all sex offenders registering in the state, must in fact buy these plates... who would vote against that?

          Then from there you do felons, then from there anyone who gets arrested for any reason, then from there everyone.

          You can see it coming...

        • by magarity ( 164372 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @02:56PM (#57982936)

          So all we have to do is get all the kiddie fiddlers to buy $500 plates. Well on second thought, brilliant!

          Over half of Amber alerts are not "kiddie fiddlers" but a parent on the wrong side of a custody dispute.

          • I can see that statistic changing quickly: over 90% of people pulled over (at gunpoint, goes without saying) for having a flashing 'Amber Alert' digital plate were on the wrong side of a dispute ... with a hacker.
        • by Strider- ( 39683 )

          So all we have to do is get all the kiddie fiddlers to buy $500 plates. Well on second thought, brilliant!

          While you're making a snide comment, the reality is that the vast majority of child abductions (and resulting amber alerts) are due to parental abductions (ie estranged mother/father running with the kids during custody battles etc....

      • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

        They are totally WORTHLESS for displaying amber alerts.

        Typically, the police are looking for a particular vehicle during an Amber alert.

        They idea is not to show that Amber alert on other people's cars. It's to make the target vehicle's license plate blink/flash/otherwise draw attention to the vehicle.

        That makes no sense -- if that have this remotely accessible device that they can set to flashing mode, why don't they just ask the device to report its location and then the police know exactly where it is, no need to wait on other drivers to report it, or turn them into vigilantes that will try to apprehend the driver themselves.

        • That makes no sense -- if that have this remotely accessible device that they can set to flashing mode, why don't they just ask the device to report its location

          Did you miss the part where the base model doesn't have GPS?

          • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

            That makes no sense -- if that have this remotely accessible device that they can set to flashing mode, why don't they just ask the device to report its location

            Did you miss the part where the base model doesn't have GPS?

            I re-read it and I still don't see that part, I only see "$799 for a premium version that features a GPS navigation add-on.", you don't need GPS navigation for simple position reports, just need a $30 GPS chipset, and I'd be very surprised if all of the frames don't already have that chipset and the "GPS Navigation" is just not activated unless you pay extra.

            I don't even know what they mean by "GPS navigation add-on" -- how does a license plate frame help with GPS navigation? Going around to the back of th

      • Number of vehicles registered per year?
        Number of amber alerts per year?
        Cost of "digital" plate versus stamped plate?
        "Unintended" costs to non-abductor users?

        I think we can find better solutions that don't disproportionately affect everybody because of the 0.0001% of vehicles used in the commission of an amber-alert disappearance.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:41PM (#57982526)

      I have yet to see a single coherent argument for digital license plates.

      Here's one: The implementation will probably be so shitty they will be hackable by the owner to display whatever you want. I'm sure a certain segment of society could find that useful.

    • I agree with you 100%, this kind of crap is totally insane. Just like "smart assistants", people will pay to get themselves tracked by the government, hackers and other nefarious groups.

      What we need is transparent displays inside the rear windows of cars and trucks, to display scrolling messages, short animations and videos to annoy the people following us and to prevent us to clearly see what's happening in our rear-view mirrors.

    • Eventually their use will be mandatory, adding yet another brick in the wall of expensive parts that keeps poor people from affordable cars. It's a climate change win as long as we keep them from wearing safety vests.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Protest near a US mil base and that's tracked.
      Request documents from a city gov and who was in the car park at that time is now on record.
      No more having a city worker follow the person out into the car park to photograph the license plate :)
      No more city police and private security having to ask for photo ID and where the car is.
      Do a first amendment audit and every type of transport in the area is fully investigated.
      Drive too near a cult compound and their private detectives will know who is doing a T
  • What is the ROI? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @12:55PM (#57982248)

    Some of the benefits of using digital licenses versus old metal ones are the ability to display Amber alerts or stolen vehicle messages when needed

    Not to seem callous but why would I pay (a lot) extra for the ability to display Amber alerts? And there already are pretty good and more affordable solutions for stolen cars.

    Currently, they cost $499 for a basic version, and $799 for a premium version that features a GPS navigation add-on.

    WTF could these things do that would possibly justify such a price point? I already have GPS in my car and my phone so that's a non-starter, especially given that it wouldn't probably be integrated into the car's infotainment system. If my car gets stolen that's what insurance is for and shockingly my insurance appears cheaper than these things. I'm all for doing things a better way but I don't see any meaningful benefit here.

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Primary use is for tracking. Some countries are considering it to assess road taxes. The other reason is to enrich government and its cronies. A digital display does not cost $500; an iPad does and is much larger and more powerful than what this needs to do. I can get these produced out of China for $50/pc (1000 minimum).

      • Tracking (Score:4, Insightful)

        by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:10PM (#57982338)

        Primary use is for tracking.

        Presumably but I don't seem much reason to buy one for that since it doesn't benefit me in the slightest. My phone doing it is bad enough already.

        Some countries are considering it to assess road taxes.

        Which would be idiotic. Tax fuel (gasoline, diesel, and/or electricity) at appropriate levels and you accomplish the sensible goal of taxing in close accordance with utilization. The bigger the vehicle and the more someone drives the more fuel they will use. Trying to track mileage via a plate is idiotic.

        The other reason is to enrich government and its cronies.

        Probably closer to the truth.

        • Tax fuel (gasoline, diesel, and/or electricity) at appropriate levels and you accomplish the sensible goal of taxing in close accordance with utilization. The bigger the vehicle and the more someone drives the more fuel they will use. Trying to track mileage via a plate is idiotic.

          I think they're trying to be pro-active, and tax on mileage, for when electric cars become predominant, and don't generate gasoline tax revenues.

          Hell, they're trying to do this already due to the better economy that cars/trucks

          • I think they're trying to be pro-active, and tax on mileage, for when electric cars become predominant, and don't generate gasoline tax revenues.

            Taxing mileage is idiotic and needlessly complicated. You can accomplish raising the necessary revenue by taxing electricity in pretty much the same manner you tax gasoline today. Cross reference the registration with the electric bill if you need to know exactly whose car it is to bill properly. The increase in electric use will correspond nicely with the increased use of electric vehicles and you can adjust the rate to the amount needed to maintain the roads properly.

            Hell, they're trying to do this already due to the better economy that cars/trucks are getting, that it has caused a decrease in tax revenues already.

            Only because we have idiots in elec

            • by guruevi ( 827432 )

              Taxing mileage is done all over Europe though. Together with weight and engine size, they decide your car taxes, insurance and even taxable income as work-home traffic is discounted, hence why they're putting cameras up to track people and correlate with what they're reporting on their tax returns.

        • How do you tax electricity without increasing the cost of electricity used for normal household purposes: lighting, computers, A/C, appliances, etc.? You would have to require all charging be done through an additional meter. Even if there is another meter in the house, the electric vehicle could still be charged via a dryer outlet.

          How do you tax electricity for those whose net usage is zero due to solar panels?

          • You tax all electricity -- a kWh is a kWh and makes the same amount of CO2 (depending on source) regardless of where it is used. Give a tax credit for the poor below a certain income.

            As far as having one's own solar system, the obvious solution is not to tax it -- that would encourage installation of solar systems.

            If you want to tax mileage, tax tires and require annual inspections to check for safe tires. Tire wear correlates pretty well to miles traveled and vehicle weight.

          • How do you tax electricity without increasing the cost of electricity used for normal household purposes: lighting, computers, A/C, appliances, etc.?

            Several answer to that. First off it doesn't matter if we increase the cost of electricity for other purposes - the cost of gasoline is priced into everything we do currently so it doesn't really change anything in that regard.
            1) Most people are going to charge their cars at their homes. If they don't have an EV then they won't get billed for charging one.
            2) You cross reference the EV car registration with the electric bill and charge accordingly. Require every EV to have a home meter responsible for the

        • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

          Tax fuel (gasoline, diesel, and/or electricity) at appropriate levels and you accomplish the sensible goal of taxing in close accordance with utilization. The bigger the vehicle and the more someone drives the more fuel they will use.

          That's incorrect. Road damage increases as the fourth power of vehicle weight according to the US General Accountability Office
          https://www.denenapoints.com/r... [denenapoints.com]

          An 18-wheeler (~6mpg) causes as much road damage as 10,000 cars (~25mpg). The 18-wheeler is paying 4x as much tax but causing 10,000x as much damage. That is not "close accordance" at all.

          Now it depends what you mean by "utilization". If you're referring to overall US expenditure to ensure a reliable oil supply then sure, that's directly proportional

      • The other reason is to enrich government

        Given the state of USA infrastructure and national debt this is not a bad thing.

    • Not to seem callous but why would I pay (a lot) extra for the ability to display Amber alerts?

      An Amber alert typically includes searching for a particular vehicle. So you wouldn't be displaying Amber alerts, the target of the Amber alert would be flashing or otherwise drawing attention to the vehicle.

      This is unlikely to convince you to buy such a plate, especially at that high a price. It's aimed at selling that plate to the state government, which then mandates it on your car. Or possibly building the technology into the car at the factory, much like OnStar can turn off a car's engine when the p

      • I can see how this could be useful to people at high risk of disappearance due to confusion, such as people suffering from dementia. Presumably the insurance companies will also offer a deduction on coverage that covers theft.

        The negatives have thoroughly been covered in the forum so I will not bother

      • It all sounds good, untiiiil you realize that most US States have a "ballot measure" system; including Michigan.

        Once you find out that the Ebil Gubermint is easily over-ruled directly by the voters on a per-issue basis at the State level, and that license plates are done at the State level, then you can realize that it is stupid to think the State could mandate the use of something like this; or that they would even try.

        Obviously, the targets are politically-conservative investors, and the only real product

        • Once you find out that the Ebil Gubermint is easily over-ruled directly by the voters on a per-issue basis at the State level, and that license plates are done at the State level, then you can realize that it is stupid to think the State could mandate the use of something like this; or that they would even try.

          "Why do you love child molesters and hate children?!!?! You want all children to be stolen in the middle of the night and raped to death!!!!"

          And now your ballot measure doesn't quite pass.

          If the basic purpose of the device is not clearly and entirely safety-related, then it isn't going to be mandated.

          Please explain the vehicle safety provided by emissions control mandates.

          • Well, in my State people are smarter than that. Not individually, perhaps, but as a group they do much better.

            Even in Michigan people aren't that stupid.

            So take heart, you won't be the only one voting!

    • I presume on private property the car enthusiasts can program them to say PSYWGN or whatever. The RoI on underglow isn't measured in dollars.

    • Could they also, at the push of a button, be set to display another number for a minute, say while you drive past the toll cameras? *That* would justify the outrageous price tag :)
    • WTF could these things do that would possibly justify such a price point?

      Er ... um ... you wouldn't need to put a new sticker on it every year?

      You'd just have to change a battery instead ... oh yeah.

    • I can think of a use case: fleets. You can assign a reserved tag to a new vehicle on the fly. Company gets to know where all its cars are. This isn’t really something that an individual would ever have a use for, but if you’re Hertz, things start to look a little different.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Think in terms of a US professional and their billable hours once lost to having to wait to get their rented/new car approved by the gov.
      Hours of driving out to a location, waiting, having data entered.
      Now the sale/rental deal will just be part of a new digital experience.
      What the math on hours lost in terms of $100 over hours in a year, every few years?
      US professional like new cars, more than one car, rental of new cars for a year, going to auctions of classic cars.
      Thats real hours back every year, ev
  • .... the ability of being tracked by government or possibly anyone else via your license plate where ever you go. "...They come with their own computer chips and wireless communication systems...."
  • At driver expense, of course.
  • by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @12:59PM (#57982278) Homepage
    Keep it simple, old plates last forever, are more durable, can be recycled, and are cheaper. There is no point in changing your license number. This is just stupidly wasteful.
    • As a follow-up they probably also weigh more and as such will burn more gas to tote around. Are they at least made in America?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It's extremely wasteful. None of these digital plates will make 10 years of life and just end up in landfills. You'd think California would have thought about the toxic e-waste these things are going to end up making.

      There needs to be legislation to regulate such wasteful, throw away products. Digital plates should be made illegal at the federal level. Along with millions of other trinkets that corporations buy for giveaways (just as an example). They are all cheap throw away shit, consuming resources,

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:00PM (#57982288)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:renew? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:04PM (#57982306)

      In Belgium you get your license plate once. You take them with you when you get a new car. When you do not need them, you bring em back i.e. drop them off at the post office.

      In the US you keep the plate but have to renew the registration every year. Usually costs about $20-25, plus tack on another $20 for yearly required emissions. So, even at $50 a year for registration the basic plate would take 10 years before the purchase price is paid off. Now, what are the odds that an electronic plate will last 10 years without damage/needing to be replaced/etc?

      • Re:renew? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:17PM (#57982394)

        In Belgium you get your license plate once. You take them with you when you get a new car. When you do not need them, you bring em back i.e. drop them off at the post office.

        In the US you keep the plate but have to renew the registration every year. Usually costs about $20-25, plus tack on another $20 for yearly required emissions. So, even at $50 a year for registration the basic plate would take 10 years before the purchase price is paid off. Now, what are the odds that an electronic plate will last 10 years without damage/needing to be replaced/etc?

        You also pay a $7/month subscription fee for the plate; plus I doubt the DMV is going to lower the registration costs. I really don't see any great value beyond perhaps more unique vanity tags and the ability for the state to us it to identify vehicles, such as changing or flashing the number to Expired, Stolen, Amber Alert, etc. and to collect some extra cash each month. Of course, no one would figure out how to access it and change the display to something more interesting.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        Must be nice to live in a place where vehicle registration is that cheap. It's an order of magnitude higher in California, even for old cars. And we kicked a governor out of office for trying to triple that.

    • The plate (as in the hunk of metal with numbers on it) you keep for years.

      Some states consider the the plate to identify you, so you take it with you to a new car. Others consider it an identifier for you and the car, so you get a new plate when you get a new car.

      "Renewals" are renewing the vehicle's registration. That's annual, and is a mechanism to collect property taxes and fees. In most states it's also a mechanism to force you to have a safety and/or emissions inspection done on your car every year.

    • Same in Canada, the plate is "yours" and whenever you change car, you transfer the plate

      • by green1 ( 322787 )

        Except in Quebec (which tends to be the case for basically any policy come to think of it)

        • by Strider- ( 39683 )

          In BC, it's a mix of both. If you wind up buying a new car and keeping your old one, even if it's just for a day while you try to sell it, you wind up with new plates. It used to be that people just transferred their plates, but come to think of it, most people I know have wound up changing plates as they've changed cars.

          That said, the plates just go back to ICBC, likely to be recycled.

    • Highly variable in the US. In some states, renewing a tag (yearly sticker) is a major local tax source; my first tag on my current car cost roughly 3% of purchase price, though it goes down every year. And yes, that’s on top of the sales tax charged. Some states, it’s practically nothing. Some states, the tag stays with the owner; some states, the tag stays with the car; some states, you have to get a new tag for every combination of owner and car; and some states require a completely new plate
  • to the private prison slave labor currently making license plates? /s

    • Those are called "movies."

      You're gonna be so excited when you make it to the surface and find a theater!

    • to the private prison slave labor currently making license plates? /s

      Yes indeed; the private prison slave labor in China making the electronic plates makes the US state prisons making metal plates seem like a resort.

  • i want my metal licence plate stamped in a prison by some condemned prisoner that is doing a life sentence for murder or some other heinous crime
  • Say I "acquire" one of these. Can I load a different OS onto it and turn it into a pad or e-reader? Of course I'd go for the "premium" model, so I'd have to disable the pesky tracking features.
  • by Tomahawk ( 1343 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @01:59PM (#57982622) Homepage

    The registration number on a car here in Europe rarely changes, certainly never is the vast majority of cases. The registration number belongs to the car, and stays with the car for its life.
    One of the reasons the number might change is when a car is exported and thus re-registered in another country (e.g. in Ireland it's much cheaper to buy a used car in the UK and import and re-register it than to buy a lower spec used car here).
    Another is vanity plates, which aren't available in all countries. I think they still are in the UK, but not in Ireland -- Irish registration numbers have the year of first sale, the county, and a sequential number, so, say 191-D-1234 is the 1234th car registered in Co. Dublin in the first half of 2019 (192 for the second half). It's possible to reserve a number in advance, though, so you could reserve 191-D-80085. That's as close to vanity plates we have. Numbers above 120000 are reserved for imports, so a car originally purchased in the UK in 2010 and re-registered several years later in Ireland would get a 10-D-120000+ registration number. (The 3rd digit attached to the year didn't start until 2013, partly to boost latter-half sales by having 2 "years", and partly to avoid having 13...)
    Anyway, a registration plate is about â20 or less. Why would anyone pay â500 or more?

    • OTOH, if it was mandated in Europe, a year later this same post would still be showing up.

      Europe isn't a country and doesn't have a constitution, and yet you have rules that your governments are required to implement. Your system of government is such that you can't make broad statements about what changes you might see in the future; you could have nearly any rules in the future, without even having to change the system.

      If there is a point or not is something you'll have to wait until they tell you to know

  • ... the smart speakers (home mini, echo) are selling like hotcakes!
  • Now Jiffy Lube will offer to change your license plate battery for just another $49.99.
  • It's called TPMS [schneier.com]. All new passenger cars in the US and EU as of 2012 have it. And it's not opt-in.

    • Easy enough to disable the sensors once your car is inspected. Then just re-enable them for the next inspection in two years (assuming you live in a state that gives a fuck).
  • You know good and well, someone is going to hack these stupid things. It's a government plate, it won't be THAT secure. Has it's own built in wireless/wifi/transmitter thingy. That means, once people start using them, "for the convenience/safety" BS, instead of a gas tax, they will simply use how many miles you drive to tax you. Oh, gee...they know EXACTLY where you are, when you were somewhere, how long it took you to get from point A to point B. You think they won't GIVE YOU A TICKET, if you arrive fast
  • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Friday January 18, 2019 @04:23PM (#57983616) Homepage

    There was an excellent review by the Evening Standard's Debbie Barham of the cuecat scanner years ago, and the line that stuck out is "it fails to solve a problem which never existed."

    That applies here.

  • I want backlit plates [cardomain.com] like Japan allows.

  • The fact that these troublesome, privacy-eviscerting, upside-free license plates are priced out of reach of the lower and middle classes, and yet there are people buying them.

  • Aren't people's lives tracked enough, already? When they want you, they are going to get you.
  • Just put a plate with a unique QR or barcode on every car, once. No need for expensive scanners, police could scan plates with a even a cell phone app. A plate is either paid up or not.

    Fucking 19th century mentality....

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