Warning: The Cars of Tomorrow Will Be Surveillance Vehicles

CommentaryIn his new book, aptly titled “Road to Nowhere: What Silicon Valley Gets Wrong about the Future of Transportation,” the author Paris Marx explains why the elites in the Santa Clara Valley shouldn’t be let anywhere near our vehicles. This should come as no surprise. Although a number of Silicon Valley’s most successful companies have made our lives more convenient, this convenience has come at a significant cost. We have traded sensitive data for expediency. Of course, this hasn’t stopped a whole host of Big Tech companies from teaming with car manufacturers. Their aim? To turn our cars into data-driven prisons, with drivers being monitored closely and mined for sensitive information. You have been warned—the cars of tomorrow will look nothing like the cars of today. The speakers will have ears, and the dashboard will have eyes. In 2020, BMW announced that it was collaborating with Amazon, a darling of Silicon Valley, in the hope of turbocharging data-driven innovation. Since the announcement, BMW has introduced a whole host of exploitative practices. As first reported by The Verge, the German multinational manufacturer is now hawking subscriptions for heated seats. If you are an owner of a new BMW, a monthly subscription to warm your derriere will set you back $18 (or, if you want “unlimited” access, $415). This is what’s known as a microtransaction, a term once associated with gaming. A popular method of monetizing games, microtransactions encourage users to purchase virtual items for cash. They are synonymous with those free-to-play games that pop up on your phone. If the move to charge customers to heat their seats seems manipulative and highly unethical, that’s because it is. You see, in the case of the heated seats, as The Verge piece noted, “BMW owners already have all the necessary components.” However, BMW has decided to place “a software block on their functionality that buyers then have to pay to remove.” The company also intends to tie other features to subscription-based fees, including heated steering wheels and the “IconicSounds Sport package,” which “allows” drivers to play engine sounds in their cars for $117. A BMW iX Flow with color-shifting material during CES 2022 at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Calif., on Jan. 6, 2022. (Steve Marcus/Reuters) Meanwhile, Ford, a company responsible for creating the first ever genuinely affordable automobile, intends to turn cars into giant TV screens. In 2016, Ford teamed up with Google, AT&T, and Amazon and began shifting its focus to enhanced automobile software. As Motortrend first reported, this involves the facilitation of in-car advertisements. According to Motortrend, the very same “onboard data connections proliferating throughout vehicle lineups that allow for built-in WiFi and over-the-air vehicle updates” could soon become direct pipelines for in-car advertisements (check out the Ford patent here). How would this system work? Basically, if you drive by a billboard that happens to be advertising French fries, for example, this advertisement will pop up on the vehicle’s screen. For each ad that appears on screen, the good people at Ford will receive some form of compensation. Other authors have spoken about Ford’s desire to become the Google of automobiles. A comforting thought for very few drivers, I imagine. Then, there’s Tesla, the American multinational automotive and clean energy company that is forever in the news. Last year, Tesla moved its headquarters from the leafy suburbs of Silicon Valley to Texas. Tesla, however, is still very much a Silicon Valley company at heart. You see, Tesla specializes in the production of electric vehicles (EVs), and as anyone familiar with EVs knows, these smart devices on four wheels are far more software than hardware. However, as The Street’s Luc Olinga reported, Elon Musk, Tesla’s CEO, wants to turn these smart devices “into living rooms on four wheels.” Instead of actually driving their vehicles, passengers will soon be encouraged to watch TV or play video games. Earlier this year, Tesla announced that it would soon integrate Valve’s Steam, a video game digital distribution service, into its vehicles. The move will allow Musk’s company “to include more than 50,000 additional video games in its system, greatly expanding the choices available to Tesla vehicle owners,” according to Olinga. Sure, gaming can be fun. However, it’s important to remember that video games have evolved. They are fast becoming Trojan horses designed to collect copious amounts of highly-personalized data from unsuspecting users. With the introduction of wearable devices, including virtual reality (VR) headsets and haptic gloves, the collection of data has completely changed the video game industry. Over the next few years, data-driven gaming looks set to change the driving industry—and not for the better. By 2025, the researcher Bill Buchannan predicts that 60 percent of all the cars on American roads w

Warning: The Cars of Tomorrow Will Be Surveillance Vehicles

Commentary

In his new book, aptly titled “Road to Nowhere: What Silicon Valley Gets Wrong about the Future of Transportation,” the author Paris Marx explains why the elites in the Santa Clara Valley shouldn’t be let anywhere near our vehicles.

This should come as no surprise. Although a number of Silicon Valley’s most successful companies have made our lives more convenient, this convenience has come at a significant cost. We have traded sensitive data for expediency. Of course, this hasn’t stopped a whole host of Big Tech companies from teaming with car manufacturers.

Their aim? To turn our cars into data-driven prisons, with drivers being monitored closely and mined for sensitive information. You have been warned—the cars of tomorrow will look nothing like the cars of today. The speakers will have ears, and the dashboard will have eyes.

In 2020, BMW announced that it was collaborating with Amazon, a darling of Silicon Valley, in the hope of turbocharging data-driven innovation. Since the announcement, BMW has introduced a whole host of exploitative practices. As first reported by The Verge, the German multinational manufacturer is now hawking subscriptions for heated seats. If you are an owner of a new BMW, a monthly subscription to warm your derriere will set you back $18 (or, if you want “unlimited” access, $415).

This is what’s known as a microtransaction, a term once associated with gaming. A popular method of monetizing games, microtransactions encourage users to purchase virtual items for cash. They are synonymous with those free-to-play games that pop up on your phone. If the move to charge customers to heat their seats seems manipulative and highly unethical, that’s because it is. You see, in the case of the heated seats, as The Verge piece noted, “BMW owners already have all the necessary components.” However, BMW has decided to place “a software block on their functionality that buyers then have to pay to remove.”

The company also intends to tie other features to subscription-based fees, including heated steering wheels and the “IconicSounds Sport package,” which “allows” drivers to play engine sounds in their cars for $117.

CES 2022 in Las Vegas
A BMW iX Flow with color-shifting material during CES 2022 at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Calif., on Jan. 6, 2022. (Steve Marcus/Reuters)

Meanwhile, Ford, a company responsible for creating the first ever genuinely affordable automobile, intends to turn cars into giant TV screens. In 2016, Ford teamed up with Google, AT&T, and Amazon and began shifting its focus to enhanced automobile software. As Motortrend first reported, this involves the facilitation of in-car advertisements.

According to Motortrend, the very same “onboard data connections proliferating throughout vehicle lineups that allow for built-in WiFi and over-the-air vehicle updates” could soon become direct pipelines for in-car advertisements (check out the Ford patent here). How would this system work? Basically, if you drive by a billboard that happens to be advertising French fries, for example, this advertisement will pop up on the vehicle’s screen. For each ad that appears on screen, the good people at Ford will receive some form of compensation. Other authors have spoken about Ford’s desire to become the Google of automobiles. A comforting thought for very few drivers, I imagine.

Then, there’s Tesla, the American multinational automotive and clean energy company that is forever in the news. Last year, Tesla moved its headquarters from the leafy suburbs of Silicon Valley to Texas. Tesla, however, is still very much a Silicon Valley company at heart. You see, Tesla specializes in the production of electric vehicles (EVs), and as anyone familiar with EVs knows, these smart devices on four wheels are far more software than hardware.

However, as The Street’s Luc Olinga reported, Elon Musk, Tesla’s CEO, wants to turn these smart devices “into living rooms on four wheels.” Instead of actually driving their vehicles, passengers will soon be encouraged to watch TV or play video games. Earlier this year, Tesla announced that it would soon integrate Valve’s Steam, a video game digital distribution service, into its vehicles. The move will allow Musk’s company “to include more than 50,000 additional video games in its system, greatly expanding the choices available to Tesla vehicle owners,” according to Olinga.

Sure, gaming can be fun. However, it’s important to remember that video games have evolved. They are fast becoming Trojan horses designed to collect copious amounts of highly-personalized data from unsuspecting users. With the introduction of wearable devices, including virtual reality (VR) headsets and haptic gloves, the collection of data has completely changed the video game industry. Over the next few years, data-driven gaming looks set to change the driving industry—and not for the better.

By 2025, the researcher Bill Buchannan predicts that 60 percent of all the cars on American roads will have internet connectivity, meaning the “opportunities for data mining are almost endless, especially as your drive to work has, possibly, been the only time that you have not been spied upon.”

The car, once a sanctuary for so many of us, looks set to become yet another data mining tool, yet another vehicle (quite literally) for surveillance.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.


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John Mac Ghlionn is a researcher and essayist. His work has been published by the New York Post, The Sydney Morning Herald, Newsweek, National Review, and The Spectator US, among others. He covers psychology and social relations, and has a keen interest in social dysfunction and media manipulation.