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42 votes
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Can I defeat telematics in a GM car?
Previously, I wondered what model car I should buy if I wanted to maintain my privacy. Thanks to everyone who chimed in, especially @kari, @qot, and @Narry. Although I astound myself to be typing...
Previously, I wondered what model car I should buy if I wanted to maintain my privacy. Thanks to everyone who chimed in, especially @kari, @qot, and @Narry. Although I astound myself to be typing this, I may just have found an option in a Cadillac Lyriq.
Earlier this year, the FTC banned GM from selling driver data to consumer reporting agencies and GM ended their egregious program. This and privacy laws in my state give me some small hope of avoiding the worst data collection practices. But, if I buy this car, I would want greater certainly that can only be had by physical intervention. Local audio/security aftermarket installers have nothing for me. Would anyone have a resource or ideas?
25 votes -
TikTok monitored Grindr activity through third-party tracker, privacy group alleges
36 votes -
Sick of smart TVs? Here are your best options.
73 votes -
Can I hope to defeat telematics in a new car?
Could you recommend a make of vehicle whose spy tech is easy to disable? This is the highest hurdle and single most important factor in my search for a car, so my other preferences and needs fall...
Could you recommend a make of vehicle whose spy tech is easy to disable? This is the highest hurdle and single most important factor in my search for a car, so my other preferences and needs fall far second. I would like an electric vehicle or hybrid model with no less cargo room than a Prius, and not larger than a mid-sized station wagon, with a track record of low repairs. Correct me if I'm misinformed, but applying those criteria seems premature until I can identify something I can make private.
I have only ever bought used cars, and have lived the same story many times: I will construct elaborate spreadsheets, research models until I could host a video walk-through of trouble spots to watch for, then will shop and cavil until I make a purchase I'm proud of. Sure, it ends up 25% over my initial budget, but I pat myself on the back for a full 18 months afterwards. Nice work, careful consumer. But it's then the repairs begin, and soon I'm spending $3-4,000 a year maintaining my certified reliable used car.
So, I am searching for a newer used car or a new car whose telematics can be disabled. I have read through discussion boards, but weary quickly at the comments defending the cozy convenience of the corporate surveillance net or chiding people like me for even trying. I don't care. If lacking or disabling spy features means I can't use my car as a phone, that sounds like a win to me. I know a little about cars and have alright technical know-how. Most importantly, I am resolute. I will not drive a car that listens to me or transmits video of my travels. Has anyone had success here?
47 votes -
Strange YouTube watch-tracking behavior
Just looking for some indication that I'm not going a bit crazy here, but does anyone else get shown videos they've never seen before, indicating that the video has been partially watched? It...
Just looking for some indication that I'm not going a bit crazy here, but does anyone else get shown videos they've never seen before, indicating that the video has been partially watched?
It seems to be just on search results and recommendations and it picks random points in the video to be kick-off points for continuing.
If anyone has an explanation that'd be appreciated, as it almost feels like my watch history is getting mixed up with someone else's.
26 votes -
Zen browser / chrome alternatives
I'm getting a little bit worried these days about the tracking features in chrome and was looking into Zen Browser. Does anyone here use it? Any thoughts? Also looking for any simple non tracking...
I'm getting a little bit worried these days about the tracking features in chrome and was looking into Zen Browser. Does anyone here use it? Any thoughts?
Also looking for any simple non tracking browser alternatives!16 votes -
Mozilla Firefox gets new anti-fingerprinting defenses
59 votes -
Data brokers know everything about you (ft. Yael Grauer)
22 votes -
Helsinki is turning to drones and artificial intelligence to help tackle one of the city's trickiest challenges - keeping traffic moving smoothly
6 votes -
Sweden's employment agency has been tracking the online locations of thousands of citizens claiming unemployment benefits in an effort to crack down on welfare fraud
28 votes -
Breaking the creepy AI in police cameras
35 votes -
Do you share your location with your friends?
I recently found myself on the other side of what might be a generational divide: I was talking with two younger family members, and they were talking about being mildly annoyed at sharing their...
I recently found myself on the other side of what might be a generational divide:
I was talking with two younger family members, and they were talking about being mildly annoyed at sharing their location with the friends via their phones -- as in they could mutually see where everyone was at any given time.
My husband and I were utterly baffled. Giving friends permanent access to our current locations felt unbelievably invasive.
They felt that way a bit, but they also mentioned that it was a way of keeping up with one another and seeing what people are up to. They'd often see they were at a bar and send the other a text telling them to "enjoy the drinks!" or "have a good time!"
I can kind of understand the appeal of this, especially as a step away from the pressures of social media. Instead of having to take pictures at the bar to put up on Instagram, you can just be at the bar, and if someone thinks that's interesting they can let you know. In a weird way, that does actually feel healthier?
They also said that not sharing your location can be seen kind of negatively -- as being aloof or closed off. This gave me even further ick, because it made it seem like there was a strong social pressure to share (similar to the "if you have nothing to hide..." argument).
So, my question is basically: what's the social landscape of location-sharing like these days? Is what my family members do common, or is that an oddity specific to their friend group? Is it actually a generational thing, or am I overgeneralizing based on my one conversation?
50 votes -
T-Mobile claimed selling location data without consent is legal—US judges disagree
23 votes -
Once extinct in Denmark, the white stork is making a comeback with the highest number of nestlings in decades
12 votes -
Saving the sea cows of Vanuatu. There’s still hope for “the friendliest ‘fish’ in the water.”
6 votes -
Meta and Yandex are de-anonymizing Android users’ web browsing identifiers
22 votes -
Arctic haze induced by an Icelandic volcanic eruption – evidence from China's highest-resolution trace gas monitoring
7 votes -
Shopify required to defend data privacy lawsuit in California
18 votes -
Thanks to recent US law, Elon Musk and Taylor Swift can now hide details of their private jets
29 votes -
From Tuberculosis to HIV/AIDS to cancer, disease tracking has always had a political dimension, but it’s the foundation of US public health
9 votes -
Find my hacker: How Apple's network can be a potential tracking tool
16 votes -
Italian parmesan producers fight fakes with microtransponders
15 votes -
Canada's Space Flight Laboratory has recently launched and deployed Norway's NorSat-4 maritime monitoring microsatellite to keep track of merchant shipping passing near its shoreline
8 votes -
Candy Crush, Tinder, MyFitnessPal: See the thousands of apps hijacked to spy on your location
65 votes -
Lawsuit: City cameras make it impossible to drive anywhere without being tracked | "Every passing car is captured," says 4th Amendment lawsuit against Norfolk, VA
52 votes -
Your chatbot transcripts may be a gold mine for AI companies
25 votes -
Google halts its four-plus-year plan to turn off tracking cookies by default in Chrome
36 votes -
Google dropping plan to remove ad-tracking cookies on Chrome
22 votes -
"Privacy-Preserving" Attribution: Mozilla disappoints us yet again
68 votes -
Lion brothers in search of mates just set a record for longest known swim
8 votes -
Collecting sex-crazed zombie cicadas on speed: Scientists track a bug-controlling super-sized fungus
24 votes -
Atlantic sturgeon are being reintroduced to Swedish waters with the help of scientists and advocates nearly 100 years after they died out in the region
15 votes -
Celebrities like Elon Musk and Taylor Swift might soon be able to hide their private jet flights from online sleuths
47 votes -
Car tracking can enable domestic abuse. Turning it off is easier said than done.
15 votes -
How GM tricked millions of US drivers into being spied on (including me)
56 votes -
GM ends OnStar driver safety program after privacy complaints
38 votes -
GM sued for sale of OnStar driving data
54 votes -
US police are using GPS tracking darts to avoid dangerous pursuits
34 votes -
GM cuts ties with two data firms amid heated lawsuit over driver data
32 votes -
Automakers are sharing consumers’ driving behavior with insurance companies
58 votes -
Simple Mobile Tools bought by ZipoApps (company offering apps with ads and tracking)
53 votes -
Trial testimony - Google considered and rejected creating a form of search that doesn't track users history from website to website
14 votes -
US FTC warns tax prep companies against invasive online tracking
14 votes -
Google gets its way, bakes a user-tracking ad platform directly into Chrome
138 votes -
Google axes bad reviews of tracker exposing Uyghur forced labor
38 votes -
How to move your Instagram feed to Pixelfed, the photo app that doesn't track your every move
41 votes -
$5 billion Google lawsuit over ‘Incognito mode’ tracking moves a step closer to trial
58 votes -
Meta's social media platforms will be temporarily barred from behavioral advertising in Norway after a ruling from the Norwegian Data Protection Authority
13 votes -
Building a flight tracker from a Raspberry Pi
16 votes