Location, location, location – it’s tracked as your data footprint

Did you know there are multiple features and apps on your smart phone that track your location data? This information to personalize your experience. In some instances you are capable of disabling this feature, and sometimes you don’t it’s just there.

This feature that stirred up a lot of commotion among tech fans who are concerned with privacy.

Apple says this data is well protected though, and it’s actually quite useful if you’re comfortable with it.

Want to see the places you visit most often – they are captured on your iPhone?

  • Go to Settings >
  • Privacy >
  • Location Services >
  • System Services >
  • Frequent Locations

You’ll see everywhere you’ve been recently. You can easily disable the feature if it makes you uncomfortable.

Other apps that use your location data: camera apps (location is embedded in the metadata), web browsers, maps, weather alerts, Facebook, Tinder. Programs can use a function called geo-location to help identify when you are close to their facility, they will use this data to send messaging (to you or an employee). One day, in the near future, we will have “instant check-in”, once your phone crosses the threshold, the system will be notified that you have arrived.

Home devices and your digital data.

NOTE – there is no way I can list every device that collects data in your home. But I’ll list the ones I use.  You can add or delete to your list.

A digital device is one that has memory, via hardware/software. The memory can be local/internal or connect to external services via wi-fi, blue tooth, etc.

Data stored can be all sorts of information. From how often it is on to what settings. Something simple would be your home thermostat. If it may have connected to a website or mobile app.

  • My iPhone. Any smart phone.
  • My iPad. Any tablets, game consoles, laptops.
  • AT&T Digital life – aka my alarm system. Depending on the various components connected to your system, it knows when you are home, how often you leave the house. Commonly used doors and windows.
    • Don’t let your guard. The alarm system is for my physical wellbeing. Which has a digital component, a website and app. So I only have cameras on the outside of the house. I also keep a sticker over my cameras on my MAC, laptop and tablets.
  • At&T internet and cable TV, And all streaming entertainment (Hulu, Netflix, YouTube). They know when you are watching, how long you are watching, what time you are watching, type of device you are using.
    • There are some viewing devices that use voice commands and motion sensor, and would be able to determine when the room is occupied and the activities.
  • My Buick and OnStar. Besides the GPS information, where you go, how often and when, your vehicle’s diagnostics system collects; tire pressures and other engine conditions.
  • Alexa (aka Echo). This devices is always on and listening. FYI – all request you make to Alexa are captured in history within the Echo app (accessed online). Echo is an Amazon product, marring online shopping and at home activity into an individual’s profile.
  • GoPro and other digital cameras/videos. Time and location are stored in the memory with the photos. A camera that uses 35 mm film may have some memory within the camera software itself.
  • Printers. Did you know that trapped deep in the printer memory is a copy of everything that has been scanned and printed. There is a tiny memory chip that compresses the files to achieve. This chip allows the system to recall the last X copies and other fun features.
  • FitBit and other health monitors.
  • Craftsman Garage Opener. Wireless keypad and accessible via mobile app.
  • Roku
  • Wii and other gaming consoles.

That is a good list, considering I claim to be low tech (maybe I’m medium tech). I’m not an early adopter, but I am curious. It takes me time to commit to purchasing new tech gadget, but I do have a collection of digital devices.

You may have a baby monitor, automatic vacuum, anything that connects to a mobile app, website or router.

 

Autonomous vehicles

When you think about an autonomous car what do you picture in your mind? Something like the Jetsons or KITT form Knight Rider.  When we talk to our friends and co-workers about autonomous cars – the conversation gets heated. Some against it, are for it, some think they will never see it happen. What does autonomous really mean? Automated? Self-driving? Handsfree? Does it pick up your Starbucks before you?

Well we know autonomous cars  are vehicles that are capable of sensing its environment and navigating without human input. And I believe the number one selling point for an autonomous car is the safety factors. But I’m still not sold that in my near life time (2020/2025) there will be 100% autonomous communities. We have different ideas of what to expect out of autonomous and transportation. My vision is more like the Jetsons. Flies through the air and is quick.

Are you thinking about how an autonomous car would affect your life?

Changes to our neighborhoods:

  • What happens to our garage attached to our house? Parking structures and handicap parking spaces?
  • Are they fuel efficient & environmentally friendly?
  • Do they just appear and dis-appear as needed?
  • Does it eliminate Valet parking?
  • Are they self charging?
  • Truck drivers?

Vehicle Ownership

  • Does everyone car-share?
  • Can an average individual afford their own autonomous vehicle?
  • Will there be as much as an emphases on customization of  vehicles?
  • Will it create value in the collector cars – ie ’66 vet?

Respondents to an independent survey were found to be most concerned about software hacking/misuse, and were also concerned about legal issues and safety.

Sensors and data will play a part in the infrastructure designed for autonomous cars. 2012, Computer scientists at the University of Texas in Austin began developing smart intersections designed for autonomous cars. The intersections will have no traffic lights and no stop signs, instead using computer programs that will communicate directly with each car on the road.

But even after all the technology is built, we have rules that conflicts with innovation. The Vienna Convention on Road Traffic This international treaty, designed to facilitate international road traffic and increase road safety, was agreed upon at the United Nations Economic and Social Council’s Conference on Road Traffic in 1968 and came into force on May 21, 1977 (http://www.unece.org/trans/conventn/ crt1968e.pdf). The convention states that “Every driver shall at all times be able to control his vehicle,” which conflicts somewhat with the automatic control concept. Systems such as antilock braking systems or electronic stability programs are acceptable because they do not take full control of the vehicle but rather help the driver to follow a desired path, possibly in situations where control of the vehicle has already been lost. Wider use of technological advances, however, will require amendment of the convention.

Do you manage your own personal data?

We often talk about how the data is used or could be used. We argue about the sensitivity of when data becomes so detailed it becomes ‘stalking’. We hurry to move past the introduction of the ‘terms and conditions’ just to get the app, the game, the connection.  We hear a lot about identity hacking and stolen personal information.  We talk a lot about keeping your data safe. Your network secured.

So their customer data is your data, data collected about you. Your likes, your behaviors, your preferences, your triggers, your digital footprint. Not only is it used to keep you safe, it is used to predict the future. But what happens when you are ‘done’ with the equipment or vehicle, is your mile by mile driving history in someone else’s hand? I want to talk to you about these things, from our perspective. Not from the perspective of customer data, but from mine and yours – personal information. Who controls it? – you know who controls your finance and money, why not your own personal information.

There are rules and laws that companies must be transparent in their terms and conditions. They have to be clear on how to opt out or into communications.  But each channel has different rules and even the largest of companies haven’t figured out how to manage the communications across their business units.  Making it necessary for you to manage multiple user ids and passwords. Is a digital wallet easy and safe? I want to have open conversations with you on what information exchange is happening between you and the information about you.

What information is aggregated and what is uniquely tied to you as an individual.

WHAT MAKES YOU UNIQUE

When you give an email with an online order, what happens to the email information? What are the rules? I think if more individuals know what to expect, and how to turn off ‘unwanted’ emails and exchange or their own contact details, and the companies are forced to oblige then we can really make the system work for us – the individual.

I like to think this is a conversation between my friends and family and myself. I want people to know what options are out there, what to do with personal digital content

Our digital world is running at lightning speed. This change in our ecosystem has us opting in and out, for what? Our digital world gives us wearables, vehicles and smart homes. All the same time it is collecting and measuring inputs and outputs.  I want individuals to understand the laws and how these companies are ‘allowed’ to store and use it.

Your car, your car’s data and you.

Today’s vehicles  are collecting data, whether it is validating that the vehicle is operating to standards, monitoring the drivers’ habits, or providing navigation. Some of this information is required by federal law and some is personally data to help you maintain your vehicle.

DATA REQUIRED BY US LAW

Clean Air Act Amendment 1990:

The EPA requires all vehicles built after 1996 must have On-Board Diagnostics (OBD). And newer vehicles have standardized computer systems (also known as OBDII). These continually monitor the electronic sensors of engines and emission control systems, includingClean Air buttons the catalytic converter, while the vehicle is being driven to ensure they are
working as designed.

Each OBD system is required to collect standard information that provides all current information and a snapshot of the same data take at the point when the last diagnostic trouble code was set.

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA):

Also collected driving information is the Event Data Recorder (EDR), similar to an airplane’s black box.  The EDR monitors the vehicle’s network of sensors for signs of a crash and stores a few seconds of the data stream, dumping and refreshing the information constantly. The type of information collected in the EDR varies among manufacturers, but it generally includes throttle and brake-pedal position, steering angle, yaw rate (the vehicle’s rotational velocity), speed, and impact-sensor data. This information is saved permanently following an airbag deployment and can be accessed through the OBD-II port by a technician using specialized equipment. No location data is stored in EDR.

EDRs have been used since the 1990s and have recently been standardized by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). EDRs are required equipment on all cars beginning in 2013, with the aim of making their data easier to obtain for crash investigations. Lawyers have used this data in court cases to demonstrate driver behavior during an accident.

EDREDR data

Non-regulated data from your vehicle

The diagnostics systems actually has open the field to collect all sorts of vehicle information. Allowing each manufacture to define additional modes for vehicle data collection. A modern car knows hwere you are, is constantily tracking your driving habits and may even be able to call for help if you have a crash, or your airbags deploy.

Though not part of the EPA’s OBD II standard, the diagnostic read-outs used by dealership technicians are also read through the OBD II connector. These service codes show you such things as knock sensor operation, FI pulse width, ignition voltage, individual cylinder misfires, transmission shift points and ABS brake condition. There can be over 300 readings available, depending on the vehicle manufacturer and model. Vehicles vary in the readings they will support. Scanners vary widely in the number of these signals that they can read. Some show just the basic OBD or OBD II signals, others show the full range of service codes.

Image result for dongle for your carThis is the type of information that can be gathered by the auto insurances via a ‘dongle‘, (see image). Think of this a Fitbit for your car: it measures input, output, distance, etc. A combination f the OBD and 2-way communication, the system lets companies like OnStar read the data and create reports about the driving history.With the help a hardware adapter and a mobile app, you can read the vehicle data your self.

This dongle is connected to your OBD port and records your driving experience: speed, breaking  habits; it will read any data the vehicle is collecting. It can tell if you are wearing your seat-belt, how many hours the car is driven, what hours it is being used and the locations it visits.

  • Shows real-time data. You can see everything from how fast you’re traveling, how hot your engine is, the voltage of your battery, and a bunch of other information that most people don’t really care about as you drive.
  • Maintains trip history. You can see a history of your trips and all the accompanying data, including how long the trip was, average mile per gallon.

Most navigation systems are separate from a car’s computer. Now a days manufactures are adding features to vehicles such as providing GPS; which can collect your routes, frequently visited locations. Most vehicles have a one-way GPS system streaming to the car. But with the additional of telematics systems in the car (think OnStar), 3rd parties now have the ability to see where you are, your driving speed. and what state your care is in mechanically.

If you think your mobile phone is the only device collecting your location, think again. Your Vehicle has the same data collection services as your smart phone (gaming console, smart watch, Go-Pro camera).

What can you do about the tracking for a new-car buyer?  Not much. Pay close attention to the terms in the user agreement for any telematics (cellular connection), and opt-out of the service.

The more you know about YOUR DIGITAL DATA the more you can control.

Here is what one OEM says:

We receive information about you through vehicle sales records provided by your dealer and we may obtain, with your consent, data obtained from your vehicle’s Event Data Recorder (“EDR”) as described in your owner’s manual (i.e., how various systems in your vehicle operate, the speed and distance of your vehicle). For additional information about EDR data, please see your owner’s manual. We also may obtain information about you and your vehicle from GM affiliates, GM dealers, GM licensees for consumer merchandise, GM credit card bank partners and other sources such as companies that provide lists of potential vehicle purchasers and current owners, if such companies are permitted to share your information with us pursuant to their privacy statements.

It’s becoming apparent that vehicles also collect a lot of interesting data on drivers themselves, placing their privacy at risk. Senator Markey found that most manufacturers collect data on customers, but often drivers are “not explicitly made aware of data collection and, when they are, they often cannot opt out without disabling valuable features, such as navigation”.