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Transportation

Breathalyzer Bike Lock Stops Drunken Cyclists In Their Tracks 178

Zothecula writes: Driving while drunk is a bad idea even on a bike. Slowed reflexes and decreased awareness of the world around them can make a drunk cyclist a danger on the road. Working in much the same way as breath-test locks for your car, the Alcoho-Lock aims to prevent cyclists from hopping in the seat when they've had one too many. The device even comes with a smartphone app that connects with the lock over Bluetooth and lets a loved one know that you are trying to bike drunk.
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Breathalyzer Bike Lock Stops Drunken Cyclists In Their Tracks

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  • by LaurenCates ( 3410445 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @05:36AM (#50291859)

    Seriously, where does this happen so frequently that an invention had to be made because of it?

    Sure, there's bike-share in big cities these days, but is drunken cycling a really big problem in these places?

    • It sounds laughable, but a lot of accidents DO happen and they DO cause harm to people. There are plenty of places that either already have laws in place or they're working towards them. See here [drivinglaws.org] and here [dw.com] for more info.

      I remember reading a while back about drunk cycling being a commonplace issue in Russia, to the extent that authorities began considering requiring licenses for riding a bike (similar to the way driving licenses work). I can't find a source for it now, so take that with a grain of salt.

      I
      • It sounds laughable, but a lot of accidents DO happen and they DO cause harm to people.

        Almost exclusively to themselves, though.

        Drunk people in public transportation are probably a bigger danger for the people around them than the same drunkards on bikes.

      • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @06:25AM (#50291993)

        I remember reading a while back about drunk cycling being a commonplace issue in Russia

        Well, sure, but alcoholism in Russia is so rampant that it's negatively affect lifespan stats. There's a real problem, for instance, with people passing out in the dead of winter and freezing to death on the streets. So, it's likely that drunk whatever is a problem in Russia, so long as it's possible to do whatever while intoxicated.

    • Seriously, where does this happen so frequently that an invention had to be made because of it?

      Sure, there's bike-share in big cities these days, but is drunken cycling a really big problem in these places?

      Because MADD. After largely accomplishing their original objectives, they needed a new raison d'être.

      And since outright prohibition doesn't work at all, they push to make ethanol consumption as difficult as they can.

      So its "ZOMG! ppl iz riding bbcle drunk! It's the leading acuse of drunken bbcle aksdnts!"

      • Because MADD. After largely accomplishing their original objectives, they needed a new raison d'être.

        Umm, what gives you the idea that drunk driving is no longer a problem? Roughly 1/3 [cdc.gov] of all accidents in the US involve alcohol according to eh CDC. That was about 10,000 people in the US in 2013.

        You weren't by any chance involved with George Bush's "Mission Accomplished" banner were you?

        • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @08:06AM (#50292249)

          That was about 10,000 people in the US in 2013.

          You weren't by any chance involved with George Bush's "Mission Accomplished" banner were you?

          About 33 percent of the number of people killed by guns in the US - depending on your metrics. Don't see too many people giving a shit about that number.

          Respectfully, 10,000 people a year is a barely a blip on the radar when dealing with causes of death. You don't want to hear that, I'm sure, but the drunken driving issue in the US is well into diminishing returns as far as resources expended. When we have random checkpoints set up to fine and incarcerate people who haven't even been in an accident, and when we lower the BAC level needed for conviction, we're running out of options other than setting snipers outside of bars and maybe swatting people if their credit card statements show they ever purchased anything at a liquor store.

          To my argument, there is a reason we're seeing those stickers that say "Impairment begins with the first drink" on cars with a MADD sticker on them. Maybe it's time we start random stops and testing for Alka Seltzer Plus intoxication, or banning people who have colds from driving.

          Before you call that ridiculous, my father once ran into a light pole when he had a nasty cold and coughed and spit out the window - totaled his car. We used to tease him about "going into hock" for his new car after that accident.

          • About 33 percent of the number of people killed by guns in the US - depending on your metrics. Don't see too many people giving a shit about that number.

            Except that most of the people killed by guns in the USA are killed by themselves...

            To my argument, there is a reason we're seeing those stickers that say "Impairment begins with the first drink" on cars with a MADD sticker on them. Maybe it's time we start random stops and testing for Alka Seltzer Plus intoxication, or banning people who have colds from driving.

            How about the cops stop pulling people over for being black, and start pulling people over for driving like shit? They'd have plenty of time.

            • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @09:18AM (#50292605)

              How about the cops stop pulling people over for being black, and start pulling people over for driving like shit? They'd have plenty of time.

              Semi related note about the profiling thing - My wife bought a new car a few years back. And we started getting pulled over a lot. Never a ticket issued. Wondering just what the hell, I did a little research. Turns out that Suzuki Arieo's were a favorite of young male drivers who wanted a "tuner" for not too much money.

              Also explained the looks of confusion on the gendarme's face, when they were expecting to give some kid a shakedown, and it's a semi respectable olde farte like me was driving the thing. A severe moment of cognitive dissonance for the poor guy. Getting rid of that car, and going back to our Jeeps solved the profiling problem.

              Now, its time for an Alka-Seltzer Plus, and I can quit any time I want - that's right. Besides, it's those nuts driving under the influence of Nyquil who are the real problem.

          • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

            About 33 percent of the number of people killed by guns in the US - depending on your metrics. Don't see too many people giving a shit about that number.

            Respectfully, 10,000 people a year is a barely a blip on the radar when dealing with causes of death.

            The other 2/3 are gun-related suicides. I don't think a valid statistical conclusion can be drawn including the suicide numbers.

            Those numbers are the number of deaths, not the number of injuries too. I'd imagine the number of injuries greatly increases the n

          • About 33 percent of the number of people killed by guns in the US - depending on your metrics.

            Which has precisely nothing whatsoever to do with drunk driving.

            Don't see too many people giving a shit about that number.

            You think nobody is against guns in the US and that nobody gives a shit? Wow, you have no clue do you? Just because there is a powerful gun lobby (read the NRA) in the US doesn't mean there isn't anyone on the other side of that issue.

            Respectfully, 10,000 people a year is a barely a blip on the radar when dealing with causes of death.

            10,000 deaths a year is a fucking catastrophe and if you think otherwise you have no sense of humanity or compassion.

        • by fnj ( 64210 )

          You weren't by any chance involved with George Bush's "Mission Accomplished" banner were you?

          Fucking retard.

        • When MADD started out, roughly 2/3 of the accidents and deaths were caused by drunk driving. So that value has been cut in half over the last couple decades, which is good. And it's not just the convenient ratio, but the actual number of deaths per year from drunk driving has been cut in half.

          Today's problem really is that the other part of that ratio has doubled, with the same increase in actual deaths from sober drivers. So, while drunks now kill half as meany people as they used to, and face stiff penalt

        • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

          "Umm, what gives you the idea that drunk driving is no longer a problem?"

          Umm, what makes you think making "drunk driving is no longer a problem" was their "original" objective? It is their recruitment phrase, nothing more.

          MADD's ideal achievement would be prohibition. They support preposterous minimum drinking ages and absurdly low definitions of "drunkenness". They want mandatory ignition interlocks on all cars. They feel entitled to insert themselves into law enforcement practices. MADD is a problem,

    • Seriously, where does this happen so frequently that an invention had to be made because of it?

      Sure, there's bike-share in big cities these days, but is drunken cycling a really big problem in these places?

      The beach community I live in has a bit of a problem with this. The issue isn't drunken bikers, per se, but the route they choose to take when they bike home. The police started issuing DUIs to bicyclists after several incidents with drunken bicyclists swerving out into traffic on one of the only busy roads in the community. In my particular community, one could easily bike anywhere they need to go strictly on almost completely deserted residential roads at the cost of maybe an extra 5 minutes. So the p

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Europe, Asia, ... (just say, non-USA) and young, working-class USA cities (aka hipster cities)

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Seriously, where does this happen so frequently that an invention had to be made because of it?

      Sure, there's bike-share in big cities these days, but is drunken cycling a really big problem in these places?

      Cyclists are demanding the same rights as motorists, no reason why they shouldn't have to have the same responsibilities.

      Back in the days when the bloke riding home from the pub was smart enough to stay on the foot path it was fine, but the cyclists sense of self entitlement has gotten so big that they've demanded everyone rides on the road and tried to make it illegal to ride on foot paths. An experienced and sober cyclists wobbles enough as it is and are a big enough hindrance and danger to other road

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @05:38AM (#50291861)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Or does this lock also feature a combination or key so that some random bike thief (who probably hasn't been drinking any alcohol) can't just come up, blow into it and steal your bike?

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @05:47AM (#50291883)

    A drunk biker is safer then a drunk driver.
    1. They are exercising so blood is pumping and creating energy that a downer like alcohol to prevent. Cars on the other hand you can be very relaxed and amplify the sedative effect.

    2. Bikers do get some leeway, they can drive on the sidewalk away from traffic without mush hassle, although you suppose to ride in the road, it isn't inforced. They can also drive in the breakdown lane.

    3. Exponential less damage when they hit something. Sure you can get hurt but your collateral damage is much less.
    The issue with drunk driving isn't about the safety of the drunk, but the safety of others. A biked drunk will cause less damage.

    This device only removed an other transportation method for people who may had a bit too much to drink. While offering little actual safety advantage.

    If you are dangerious to bike, you probably wouldn't get too far anyways.

    • 2. Bikers do get some leeway, they can drive on the sidewalk away from traffic without mush hassle

      Or, you know, drive on bike lanes, those things away from traffic of which we have a lot here around in northern Europe.

      • Shut up John, you are drunk. Sidewalks are better and wider.
        And its how it goes, in Scandinavia.

        • Sidewalks are better and wider.
          And its how it goes, in Scandinavia.

          Well at least you have the excuse that you need to dig through 1m layer of snow if you wanted to see the lane markings on the street, so you might as well ignore them and bike wherever you want.
          And all the vodka you've drank doubles probably as anti-freeze in case you get lost in the winter snow storm. ;-)

  • by macraig ( 621737 ) <mark@a@craig.gmail@com> on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @05:56AM (#50291905)

    No self-respecting cyclist drunk will ever voluntarily purchase one of these, and they can't serve a purpose sitting on a store shelf, so what's the point? Will the manufacturer now secretly draft boilerplate for new state legislation that will require the use of breathalyzer locks by all cyclists and make it a criminal offense to refuse, thus guaranteeing themselves a captive market?

    (Don't laugh; how do you think California wound up with laws mandating bicycle helmets, car insurance, and smog checks, among other things? Assemblymen had little faeries with deep pocketses whispering in their ears. Captive markets created by and for corporate interests.)

    • by Mr D from 63 ( 3395377 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @07:02AM (#50292073)

      No self-respecting cyclist drunk will ever voluntarily purchase one of these,

      This product is worthy of a Lance Armstrong endorsement.

    • No self-respecting cyclist drunk will ever voluntarily purchase one of these, and they can't serve a purpose sitting on a store shelf, so what's the point? Will the manufacturer now secretly draft boilerplate for new state legislation that will require the use of breathalyzer locks by all cyclists and make it a criminal offense to refuse, thus guaranteeing themselves a captive market?

      Not by all cyclists, just those with a DUI. If it's reasonable to force people to install them on their cars, it's reasonable to make people use them with their bicycle in the same circumstances.

      (Note if..then, I'm not really sure what I think, except that I think most of the existing devices are bullshit, but I also think drunk driving is bullshit)

      • Any crime that does not involve anybody else is bullshit. Drunk driving is stupid but should not be a crime until you damage something that is not yours or somehow impact another.

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          Any crime that does not involve anybody else is bullshit. Drunk driving is stupid but should not be a crime until you damage something that is not yours or somehow impact another.

          The problem is choice. You chose to drink, you chose to drive. Society is the one who pays for your choices. Driving is one of the few activities you can do where the damage is borne disproportionately on those around you, and not on the person performing the activity.

          Sure, you crash into a tree and die, no big deal. But more often

          • Regardless of what might have happened your supporting laws that punish for what might have happened. Your quickly get into thoughtcrime. Requiring that you need an aggrieved party makes far more sense.

        • Any crime that does not involve anybody else is bullshit. Drunk driving is stupid but should not be a crime until you damage something that is not yours or somehow impact another.

          That's like saying wearing a seat belt is a dumb idea because you haven't crashed yet. You pretty much missed the entire point.

          The problem with your logic is that by the time the drunken person's behavior does damage someone else it is too late. Driving drunk is A) unnecessary and B) substantially and demonstrably more likely to result in tangible harm to other people or property. So it makes sense to prohibit behavior with no societal value that causes significant burdens on society. You want to get dr

          • by macraig ( 621737 )

            The problem with your logic is that by the time the drunken person's behavior does damage someone else it is too late.

            Thanks a lot. You just legitimized prosecution of thoughtcrime and the chipping and monitoring of every living human.

          • The law is not about making a civilized society it's about the bare minimum of required regulations so we can live with each other. The basic premise for any criminal law is would you kill somebody for doing it?

            Seatbelt laws are dumb, your logic is that since we have socialized medicine society has the right to police any behavior that would place a burden on that socialized medicine. Extend that out and suddenly you have a reason to police everything by that same standard.

      • by johanw ( 1001493 )

        It is much more difficult and expensive to get a spare car, and driving a car requires a license. A spare bike on the other hand would be much cheaper than the lock (2nd hand oldies go here for about $50 - 100), and you don't need a license to drive one and bikes don't have license plates who tell the state who's their owner.

      • If it's reasonable to force people to install them on their cars, it's reasonable to make people use them with their bicycle in the same circumstances

        No, it is not reasonable. A 30 lb bicycle, which for most riders barely goes above 20mph, being considered equivalent to a 2000+ pound machine that can trivially exceed 80 mph, is downright idiotic.

    • by yarbo ( 626329 )
      Bicycle helmets are not mandatory in California.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @06:00AM (#50291921)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • So I'm going out on the piss and riding a bike - why exactly would I be inclined to take an alco-lock with me? The answer is I wouldn't. Either I intend to ride home regardless or I intend to lock the bike up securely in the morning in which I case I need a big chain. Either way the lock has no purpose. And bluetooth and a smart phone app? For fucks sake....

    The only thing that surprises me about this useless gadget is that it actually exists as a thing on sale right now instead of being yet another harebr

  • >"Driving while drunk is a bad idea even on a bike"

    Doing most anything that requires movement or thinking is a bad idea while drug intoxicated.

  • So let me get this straight.....

    On the always secure internet, where law enforcement pretty much has access to everything on your phone, a person is going to put this device on their bicycle, and the app is going to report that they are out in public drunk?

    Golly gosh - who else is going to get that information? Officer Friendly might just happen along to visit you at the bike rack.

  • Here in Florida you can be arrested for DUI while mowing your yard on a tractor mower. And it has happened.

    Bikes and tractor mowers are considered vehicles (motorized or not), and you're responsible for the safe operation of any of those vehicles.

    • by fnj ( 64210 )

      Here in Florida you can be arrested for DUI while mowing your yard on a tractor mower. And it has happened.

      By what authority do these pigs claim authority over operations confined to one's own PRIVATE PROPERTY which are not violating zoning regulations, disturbing the peace, etc? Long established norms only require licensure to operate on public roads.

      I'm not saying persecution has never happened, but anyone with competent legal resources could take these nazis to school.

    • I had a neighbor who got a DUI in his front yard because he had his car keys in his pocket and was standing next to his car.
  • Can't wait for this device to be hacked, such that a hacker can turn on the lock whenever even a sober person is riding along... crash.
  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @09:32AM (#50292687)

    Wouldn't a reasonably complicated combination lock basically serve the same purpose without needing any fancy electronics?

  • by Cow007 ( 735705 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @10:52AM (#50293371) Journal
    Why not put one on the door to keep out a drunk spouse? Probly better as an enrty lock of course. Which would be useful for "sober housing" buildings...
  • I don't know if this is an actual product intended to be sold to the public, or just a gimmick product design intended as part of a PSA campaign.

  • auto locks mandated by courts for repeat drunk drivers doesn't stop friends, neighbors, strangers, children, spouses from blowing into the little device that prevents drunk usage. so if it doesn't work for cars then it isn't going to work for bikes. i bet one could even teach a dog how to blow into the breathalyzer.

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