Warning…Your Car will Spy on You within Five Years

FILE PHOTO - The logo of Ford Motor Company is seen on vehicles in a parking lot at the Ford assembly plant in Genk. Photo: Reuters
FILE PHOTO - The logo of Ford Motor Company is seen on vehicles in a parking lot at the Ford assembly plant in Genk. Photo: Reuters
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Warning…Your Car will Spy on You within Five Years

FILE PHOTO - The logo of Ford Motor Company is seen on vehicles in a parking lot at the Ford assembly plant in Genk. Photo: Reuters
FILE PHOTO - The logo of Ford Motor Company is seen on vehicles in a parking lot at the Ford assembly plant in Genk. Photo: Reuters

Car experts at the annual Detroit Motor Show and human rights activists have warned from a growing technological development in new cars allowing them to spy on the driver and send information about him to the car manufacturer.

They said the technology began sending information about the car itself. The technique developed to collect information on how to drive the car, and then to collect information about the places visited by the driver, his habits and hobbies.

Lisa Joy Rosner, chief marketing officer of Otonomo, a company that sells connected-car data, told the Washington Post: “Car manufacturers have realized that they're not hardware companies anymore, but also software companies.”

“The first space shuttle contained 500,000 lines of software code, but compare that to Ford's projection that by 2020 their vehicles will contain 100 million lines of code,” she added.

"We have to reconsider our cars," said Rosner. “They are no longer just a useful and convenient driving force. They have become an electronic device, like a giant computer,” she warned.

Automakers do not hide what they do in purchase contracts, however, they mention it in almost seen articles and small letters. According to information provided at the Detroit Motor Show by Gartner Technology Research, after five years all the cars sold in the United States and Europe will be equipped with monitoring devices.

At the show, Natalie Kumaratne, a Honda spokeswoman, refused to answer reporters’ questions on the data collected by the company. She said they are being used in experiments aiming at advancing the industry. Instead, Kumaratne provided a copy of a contract to buy a Honda car that notes that the vehicle is equipped with multiple monitoring systems.

Dan Pierce, a GM spokesman, said: “We inform the consumer on the data we are going to collect, but if he declines, we do not collect it.”

Karen Hampton, a Ford spokeswoman, replied with a similar statement. “It's not new to have electronic devices in cars. About half a century ago, they were placed to provide information on the car to the driver. But now, they are transmitting information about the driver. Each car today has something like a "black box" that usually monitors the plane's flight.”

Lauren Smith, a human rights activist at the Future of Privacy Forum said that while devices such as Verizon Hum, Zubie and Autobrain connect cars to the Internet, and provide drivers with connection, they allow companies to partake in this communication.

Pam Dixon, executive director of the World Privacy Forum, said: “There’s a load of anti-fraud companies and law enforcement agencies that would love to purchase this data, which can reveal our most intimate habits. Security bodies will be delighted with such data.”

Dixon noted that these data can include the number of times we didn’t use the seat belt, the speed of the car, and frequent visits to a particular restaurant, or clinic for treatment of a particular disease.



China Heatwaves Boost Ice Factory Sales

A worker uses tongs to move ice blocks inside a refrigerated store at the Feichao Ice Factory in Hangzhou. Heatwaves across China have caused demand for ice to soar  - AFP
A worker uses tongs to move ice blocks inside a refrigerated store at the Feichao Ice Factory in Hangzhou. Heatwaves across China have caused demand for ice to soar - AFP
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China Heatwaves Boost Ice Factory Sales

A worker uses tongs to move ice blocks inside a refrigerated store at the Feichao Ice Factory in Hangzhou. Heatwaves across China have caused demand for ice to soar  - AFP
A worker uses tongs to move ice blocks inside a refrigerated store at the Feichao Ice Factory in Hangzhou. Heatwaves across China have caused demand for ice to soar - AFP

In a high-ceilinged room on the outskirts of eastern China's Hangzhou, workers use tongs to slide large blocks of frosty white ice along a metal track into a refrigerated truck.

Sales have picked up in recent weeks, boosted by heatwaves sweeping the whole country as summer sets in, the owner of Feichao ice factory, Sun Chao, told AFP.

Globally, heatwaves are becoming more frequent and intense because of climate change, experts say, and China is no exception -- 2024 was the country's hottest on record, and this year is also set to be a scorcher.

Last week, authorities warned of heat-related health risks across large swathes of eastern China, including Zhejiang province where Hangzhou is located.

"In the spring, autumn, and winter, a higher temperature of two to three degrees doesn't have a big impact on our sales," Sun said.

"But in the summer, when temperatures are slightly higher, it has a big impact."

Feichao is a relatively small facility that sells ice to markets, produce transporters, and event organizers.

As the mercury soared past 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in multiple cities across China recently, ice from businesses like Sun's was used to cool down huge outdoor venues.

In neighbouring Jiangsu province, organisers of a football match attended by over 60,000 people placed more than 10,000 large blocks of ice around the stadium, according to the state-owned Global Times.

As AFP watched lorries being loaded with Feichao's ice on Wednesday, an employee from a nearby seafood shop came on foot to purchase two ice blocks -- each selling for around $3.50 -- hauling them off in a large plastic bag.

"In May and June, I can sell around 100 tonnes a day. In July, that number grows, and I can sell around 300 to 400 tonnes," Sun told AFP.

China has endured a string of extreme summers in recent years.

In June, authorities issued heat warnings in Beijing as temperatures in the capital rose to nearly 40 degrees Celsius, while state media said 102 weather stations across the country logged their hottest-ever June day.

The same month, six people were killed and more than 80,000 evacuated due to floods in southern Guizhou province.

China is the world's biggest emitter of the greenhouse gases that scientists generally agree are driving climate change and making extreme weather more intense and frequent.

It is also a global leader in renewable energy, adding capacity at a faster rate than any other country.