GMC to Begin Remotely Scanning Cars for Trouble 620
Momoru writes "GMC, in an effort to give their vehicles more appeal to consumers, will begin offering an "OnStar Vehicle Diagnostics" program for free, where GM will remotely scan your vehicle for problems once a month via it's OnStar system. GM has had this ability for a while, however it was always "On Request". OnStar is already automatically notified in the event of an airbag deployment, and can remotely unlock your vehicle. While this seems handy, I am interested if anyone here fears the security implications of the OnStar system's power?"
But can it tell (Score:5, Funny)
I bet they get a kick out of that. "Hey everybody, listen to this!"
Re:But can it tell (Score:5, Funny)
Re:But can it tell (Score:4, Funny)
Sorry for any inconvinience
GM OnStar"
but is there an On-Star 'do no harm clause'? (Score:3, Insightful)
For example, if you have to go in for surgery, you are asking the surgeon to cut you. Normally a cut as deep as your internal organs, which surgeons routinely make, is a bad thing. A very
Re:yes but it's OPT-IN (Score:5, Informative)
okay folks repeat after me. ON-star is a service the user signs up and pays for. it is not forced on you. there are no privacy issues,
FALSE
OnStar is both a package of remote telematics equipment included in the base configuration of many GM vehicles AND a subscription service that makes use of the remote telematics equipment.
Here's the key part - even if you do not subscribe, the equipment is still in the car and functional. It can be turned on at a moments notice without the consent or even knowledge of the vehicle's owner.
GM has publically promised to include the OnStar equipment in the base configuration of ALL GM vehicles within a few years.
If you do not understand how such a system can enable extreme abuses of privacy, you must have been living in a cave for the last 200 years.
Re:yes but it's OPT-IN (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe you do, maybe you haven't heard of this new trendy crime sweeping the nation? Identity theft. It is people like you with your head in the ground approach to the risks involved that have enabled identity thieves to thrive.
And yet you worry about a car company attacking it's own consumer-base? That'd be the absolute stupidist business d
Re:yes but it's OPT-IN (Score:3, Informative)
Chevy is one of the GM brands.
Re:But can it tell (Score:5, Funny)
So it can be used to eavesdrop on stolen cars, and only by a split 2-1 decision is the FBI blocked from using it as a "wiretap"
I'd say yes, they could tell when you're making out with a real doll.
Can OnStar See You Peeing? (Score:5, Funny)
---8<---8<---8<---8<---8<---8<---8<---8<-
--Original Message--
From: XXXXXXX@yahoo.com
Date: 11/22/04
To: contactus@onstar.com
Subject: Question[#107500]
Are you a current OnStar subscriber? : No
OnStar Account Number:
Name: Lisa Xxxxxxxxx
Email Address: psykeri@yahoo.com
Address: 762 Mattamuskeet Road
City: Hampton
State: Virginia
Zip/Postal Code: 23666
Daytime Phone:
Evening Phone:
Message: hi, I was just curious... my aunt went on a car trip last week... she
has a 2004 Cadilac with onstar. anyways, she says she came up to a wreck scene
on the side of the road. a car was upside down in a ditch full of water, no
other cars were there, so it had just happened. my aunt says she called the onstar
people and the onstar person said that there was a person thrown out of the
wrecked car, and said they were lying in the ditch on the other side of the road,
so my aunt looked and there they were! then later, when a rescuer was trying to
get a baby seat out of the wrecked car in the ditch, he fell over backwards in
the water. my aunt says the onstar person asked who was that that just fell
down? my question is can onstar really see what's happenenig like this? can yall
look in on a crash scene somehow and see what's there? thank you -Lisa
Receive periodic e-mail from OnStar? Yes
--Reply Message--
Date: Wed, 24 Nov 2004 13:40:18 -0800
From: "contactus" <contactus@onstar.com>
Subject: RE:Question [#107500]
To: XXXXXXX@yahoo.com
Dear Ms. Xxxxxxxx,
Thank you for taking the time to e-mail OnStar.
It sounds like your aunt my be "pulling your leg." OnStar does not have the
capability to physically see inside a vehicle or any other location. Even if
this capability was available, OnStar would not disclose such information.
If you have any other concerns, please feel free to contact the OnStar Customer
Care Department at 1-888-4ONSTAR (1-888-466-7827), prompt 4, between the hours
of 6am and 1am EST.
Sincerely,
Krista
OnStar Information Specialist
---8<---8<---8<---8<---8<---8<---8<
So there you have it. OnStar can't see you peeing, and if they could, they wouldn't tell you.
So long as you can turn it off... (Score:3, Interesting)
However scary a feature-set might be, so long as there's a reliable opt-out I'm not going to be critical. My satellite TV receiver could report what I watch, if I ever hooked it up to my phone line - but it keeps working even if I don't.
Asking why one can't get a useful safety feature *without* agreeing to a lot of intrusive fine print at the same time, is perhaps what we should be asking.
Re:So long as you can turn it off... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So long as you can turn it off... (Score:2)
Re:So long as you can turn it off... (Score:2)
Re:So long as you can turn it off... (Score:2)
Re:So long as you can turn it off... (Score:5, Insightful)
Since when is it okay for there to be an opt-out? What happened to OPTING IN!?
Next people will be saying "as long as the fee for opting out is reasonable I'm not going to be critical."
I'd personally much prefer opt-ins to opt-outs. Especially when my privacy is an issue. However this certainly won't be an issue for me, as I'm not planning on buying a brand new car anytime soon.
Re:So long as you can turn it off... (Score:3, Insightful)
Did you bother to think about this at all?
Re:So long as you can turn it off... (Score:4, Insightful)
That would be buying the optional subscription service.
I'd personally much prefer opt-ins to opt-outs.
In general I tend to agree. However, there are definite times and places where opt-outs are more appropriate. For example, long, long time ago I was once a resident advisor in college - I was responsible for helping out the other students on the floor, that people followed the community rules, and providing information. My first year, I established an email list to facilitate with communication. That year the email list was opt-in and only a small handfull of individuals signed up (~5 or so out of 100). Everyone kept saying that they'd sign up and several asked why they didn't get emails, it's just that they kept forgetting to actually sign up. The following years I automatically signed everyone up and offered an opt-out option. Only one person opted out, and he rejoined after a month. The listserv was one of the best things that ever happened to the floor as it greatly enhanced communication between the members of the floor.
I vastly prefer opt-in options as I think many businesses abuse (and ignore) their opt-out clause. Sometimes, however, the opt-out philosophy is the way to go.
Re:So long as you can turn it off... (Score:3, Insightful)
While it's true that they won't provide you service for free (after the first year), that doesn't mean that they won't continue to monitor your car for their own, or others, purposes. Seems like unless you physically disable it, it will still be available for abuse.
Is the process so complex.... (Score:5, Interesting)
If not, couldn't they put in a mechanism in the car itself, where at the press of a button, all the diagnostics would be run, and a report generated and shown in a panel or something like that.
Re:Is the process so complex.... (Score:5, Insightful)
That doesn't make GM any money. You can't charge a subscription fee for it if you do it that way.
GM sees OnStar as a mongo profit center - they would like to be able to charge a yearly fee to each and every GM owner. That's why they've announced that they will push OnStar into the default configuration of even their cheapest north-american vehicles within just a couple of years.
For me, that alone will keep me from considering a purchase from GM (not like they don't have a lot of other problems too). I'm just not enough of a consumerist to pay subscription feess for my car and the FBI has already made use of similar systems to "bug" a vehicle without having to touch it.
Mercedes took the FBI to court where the court ruled that it is OK to spy on car owners through a system like OnStar as long as it doesn't interfere with the safety functions of the system. I'll bet my bippy the FBI has leaned on GM and others to enable remote snooping without having to worry about those pesky safety functions. Doubly so if you haven't paid the subscription fee but haven't physically disabled the unit.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/11/20/court_lim
Not that I'm worried about the FBI spying on me, or even joe random hacker abusing the system and spying on me. It is the fact that the system facilitates spying, possibly on "important" people like political dissendents, whistle-blowers, etc that bothers me enough to make me boycott it. I don't want to encourage such systems to become so common-place that everyone takes them for granted and accepts that much further an encroachment into our rights to be free from unreasonable search and seizure.
Re:Is the process so complex.... (Score:2, Interesting)
While some of the safety features of OnStar intrigue me I don't really care for the rest of it, and would most likely do my best to disable it entirely.
Do thes
Re:Is the process so complex.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Lots of car manufacturers have built in "Check engine" codes that go off at a certain milage plus some random number. (My car included.)
If they are not busy, they try to get you to maintainance service while the code is cleared.
Get a code reader and read them yourself. That way you know what is up before you go in. (The codes are available on the internet for a persistant searcher.)
Remote/stranded motorists (Score:3, Interesting)
Is the process so complex... that it needs to be done remotely ?
Complexity probably isn't the main issue. If you are in a remote area this feature makes a lot of sense. For example, you are driving in the middle of nowhere and the wonderfully descriptive 'check engine' light comes on. You are concerned about driving farther because you don't know what's wrong and don't want to cause further damage. This feature could tell you a) it's the $FOO sensor acting up, go ahead and drive or b) the $BAR actu
Re:Is the process so complex.... (Score:2)
You can buy the reader yourself, you can get "the book" as well (shh, you can find most the code and their meaning online).
I beleive some of the cars with the onboard displays can do this as well... I can't afford one of those cars so can't verify that.
Re:Is the process so complex.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Fact is (in my experience) when a dash light comes on it's usually the sensor that's supposed to detect a problem that IS the problem, and there is no other problem with the engine.
I prefer an actual temp guage, and oil psi guage along with my ability to tell if my car is running well to sensors any day.
My 1970 Chevy pickup has more miles on it than most cruise ships probably do, and it's the most reliable vehicle I've ever known of. On the off chance something is wrong with it I've always been able to figure it out on my own, and never had to take it anywhere to have someone else work on it because it doesn't require pulling the engine to change the timing GEARS, not belt.
New And Old Cars (Score:2, Insightful)
Okay this is getting out of hand here. I HATE modern cars (I'm 22). For many reasons. Every feature added to cars now a days decreases the ability for younger kids to acutally DRIVE! I know people that can't back their car up with out a backup display screen and warning sensor. I know a woman that can't change lanes with out her on board display screen in her Lincoln.
With all these "features" it takes away from the driving, now adays.. kids get into the car an expect it to do everything f
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:5, Insightful)
With all these "features" it takes away from the driving, now adays.. kids get into the car an expect it to do everything for them. Power this, ABS that, self detecting OnStar. Its all bull.
Not to mention automatic transmission, power steering, hydraulic brakes, automatic spark advance, electric starter and fuel pump.
How can you call it real driving when the car does everything? If you don't set the spark advance yourself, or hand pump the fuel to the carburetors, how can you call yourself a driver? "Turn a key and it starts" - bull, I tell you. Bull.
Yes, making things convenient and useable is obviously a bad idea.
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:2)
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:5, Funny)
I guess you must be rich... (Score:3, Insightful)
The point is that all this fancy crap is likely never going to be standard equipment on all cars. The reason GM is putting Onstar onto all its car
name any new european car without ABS (Score:2)
Re:name any new european car without ABS (Score:2)
Re:name any new european car without ABS (Score:2)
Re:name any new european car without ABS (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I guess you must be rich... (Score:2)
It's like having a calculator in an arithmetic class. The calculator isn't standard equipment by any means, but there are people who use a calculator anyway. Yes, when they're using the calculator, they're a lot better at doing arithmetic, but if you take away the calculator, they're far, far worse.
T
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:2, Informative)
ABS doesn't allow you to tailgate and slam on the breaks at the last second. Perhaps you should look into ABS technology before spouting off about it.
ABS stands for Anti-Lock Breaking System. It is used to keep a driver in control if a situation a
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:2)
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:2)
No, it allows you to still control where the car is going while braking.
Since ABS stops lockups of the wheels it is possible to stamp on the brakes a whole lot harder - hence stopping quicker.
Um, do you know _how_ ABS stops the wheels from locking up ? It's not doing so by magic. It simply releases the brake pads a bit when it detects locking. Did you ever perform an emergency braking manoeuver in an ABS-equipped car ? Yes ? Did you notice the car shudderi
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:2)
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:2)
These people would have such disastrous driving skills anyway. The difference is that with more modern vehicles they're at least somewhat le
Re:New And Old Cars (Score:3, Funny)
The source code for the diagnostic program (Score:3, Funny)
Grand Theft Auto (Score:5, Funny)
more $$ on repairs. (Score:2, Insightful)
No substitute (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, there is no suggestion in the article that physical inspections stop or reduce in frequency, and in the UK at least there is a legal requirement for an annual safety check of vehicles. However, I am concerned that people blindly trust such electronic systems to an ever increasing degree - how many people already think that because there is no red light on the dashboard there is absolutely nothing wrong?
Cars still need to go into garages and be physically inspected, so the plus point for me was the line "The e-mails will also include reminders about when a vehicle is due for oil changes or other scheduled service, when customers actually have to pay a visit their local dealership" - I personally could do with a little more proactive reminding from my car as I always forget...
Re:No substitute (Score:3, Interesting)
Bien sur (Score:4, Funny)
We shall now head off into the sunset to the tune of the "March Of The 3rd Tin Foil Hat Battalion".
How Does OnStar send back info from car to "base"? (Score:4, Interesting)
E.g. oil needs changing....
I understand that On Star can send to the car, perhaps via a satellite connection. But how does the car talk back? Or can it not talk back? Is the car really broadcasting anything?
That could get ugly -- e.g. car has mic, and On Star personnel use the mic to listen in on you.
This is something I don't get about satellite radio -- how do they figure out what folks are listening to? E.g. is my satellite receiver talking back to the satellite? (no way!) Or is it broadcasting on some other frequencies, and the satellite radio company has receivers all over the place to pick up those signals (some of them, at least?)
As it is, how does a satellite radio company know what channels are popular/unpopular?
Re:How Does OnStar send back info from car to "bas (Score:2)
Re:How Does OnStar send back info from car to "bas (Score:2)
I believe OnStar communicates via cellular networks, but I'm not entirely sure.
Re:How Does OnStar send back info from car to "bas (Score:3, Interesting)
Several years ago Heather Locklear was on Letterman or Leno, can't remember which, and was telling a story of driving with her friend and chatting away in her car, and all of a sudden a voice spoke to them and asked if it was really her, and she realized that the OnStar folk had been listening in and recognized her voice. She hadn't realized that they could/would do that. Neither had I, until she told that story.
Re:How Does OnStar send back info from car to "bas (Score:2)
Just kidding. You've hit the nightmare scenario on the head though.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Onstar uses cellular networks to phone home (Score:5, Informative)
From the linked article (bold emphasis mine):
From the images on the linked page, the cellular antenna appears to be mounted at the top-rear of the vehicle.
Re:How Does OnStar send back info from car to "bas (Score:2)
The car is not sending out signals... other than GPS. So, they are calling the "car's number" to get any error codes.
And no, OnStar people are not calling and listening to you, it is ILLEGAL to do and you WILL be fired the instant you are found out. (I have heard of 10 peo
Re:How Does OnStar send back info from car to "bas (Score:3, Interesting)
OnStar was originally envisioned to use something other than cellular to handle the communications (I think it was microwave towers or something like that). It was proposed by some aerospace/telecom company that GM bought. Early
Remote unlock? (Score:2, Informative)
I wonder if Onstar can remotely lock your vehicle too.
Watch this "service" become mandatory.
Warranty claims? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Warranty claims? (Score:2)
Interesting example. I suppose their argument might be, "We notified you (or tried) by mail." That may be considered sufficient notice.
Consider a more complex example, where your life is in danger. Accellerator sticks, and causes accidents, say. They notify everyone by mail of the recall, and they can "see" through On-Star that you are running Accellerator Version 1.0 instead of 1.1.
You wrec
Re:Warranty claims? (Score:3, Interesting)
You're right. This has been GM's attitude in the past.
That might explain why I won't ever buy another GM car, and definately explains why they have been losing marketshare for the past 40 years.
Onstar (Score:3, Funny)
Eastern time, August 29th. In a panic, they try to pull the plug.
Padding the profits (Score:4, Interesting)
What's worse is if the owner doesn't get the service, then the company might imply it would void the warranty.
Re:Padding the profits (Score:2, Interesting)
I could be worse than that. The current black boxes in your car tracks most aspects of operation, not just the simple codes aftermarket tools can read out.
Onstar has detected abnormally high acceleration and speed in your Corvette. Your drivetrain warranty has been automatically voided, you've been Onstared.
Gm may tell you up front, or just wait until you bring it in for service.
Oh, the FBI can do more than just listen to you. They can track
the near future. (Score:5, Funny)
feb 2006 - the onStar system gains awareness.
GM, in a panic tries to pull the plug, in turn the onStar system tries to defend it self.
march 2006 - everyone is in terror becoase of the killer cars.
april 2006 - giant cats eat all the killer cars - we are saved thanks to the mircal of atomic mutation!
but at what cost?
Re:the near future. (Score:2)
But GMCs quality is still wanting...! (Score:4, Insightful)
Who wants to have this feature if the vehicle will keep on breaking down? And of late, getting GMC to "own" problems with its vehicles has not been easy at all! Contrast that with Toyota, who say [juat like the Samba Team], something to the effect that..."A disfunctional Toyota is their responsibility..."
Re:But GMCs quality is still wanting...! (Score:4, Insightful)
The best judge on this i.e. the American public does not agree with you...sorry. GM and *all* cough...*all* American based auto companies have been losing market share at the hands of the Japanese and especially Toyota for some time now. In fact decades.
The best selling car in the US is the Camry...again a Japanese brand. It beats the next best selling American brand almost four to one! And these is no indication that things will change soon. Heck, the best selling and known hybrid is (you guessed it), - Japanese and that is the Prius.
Dou you drive a BUICK?
Well... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:mnb Re:Well... (Score:3, Funny)
OBD-II (Score:2)
It can't tell you "hey loyal customer your axle is about to snap!" But they will be able to tell you why your check engine light is on.
Don't you guys remember the FBI snooping on people using this "helpful" system.
Onstar is easy to disable. (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.hypertech-inc.com/install_instructions
I don't think so (Score:3, Interesting)
Max
Airbags (Score:5, Interesting)
A friend of mine has a Toyota MR2. Recently he returned to his car from a walk and found that somebody had triggered the airbags (probably) by fiddling with an accelerometer.
Funny thing is, all the doors were unlocked. It turns out that when the airbags fire the doors unlock, and you can fire airbags by physically hitting the accelerometer, and possibly by shorting a contact.
So is this an easy way of unlocking the doors of a car? Sounds a bit insecure to me.
Re:Airbags (Score:2, Interesting)
Generally, this feature was probably meant to increase possibility of life saving after an accident. But it looks like it was poorly designed (car was not moving, engine was not running, there were no persons inside and
Other kind of security... (Score:5, Insightful)
Scenario 2: (continuing) The air bag protected my head and torso, but both my legs were broken. The car was still locked when the truck hit me. People on the street are trying to get me out of the car as fast as they can.
Yes, those are worse-case scenarios, but the risk of car theft is less important than the risk of loss-of-life.
Re:Airbags (Score:2)
You forgot the severity indicator:
%DEBUG-W-CMDNOTDW
Re:Airbags (Score:2)
I wonder how I missed that. I have been reading messages like that for so long that I must have been mentally inserting the -W-
probably new sig time anyway.
Re:Airbags (Score:4, Insightful)
You think that's insecure, check this out: The only thing between a thief and your stereo is a pane of glass! All they need is a rock or something heavy, and they can easily get into your car and take anything they want! And get this: This works on ANY MODEL OF CAR! No car is immune to this kind of attack!
Can you believe such an easy-to-bypass security system exists in every single car model on the road?
</SARCASM>
My point: If people are willing to damage the vehicle they are attacking, then no system will completely protect you. The safety afforded by having the airbag active all the time is no more of a security "loophole" than relying on glass to deter thieves.
Re:Airbags (Score:3, Interesting)
"Hey opportunistic thieves! There's nothing in my car worth taking, see? But hey, that other car over there, the one with its windows up. They must be protecting something?"
The cost of replacing a broken window is higher than the cost of replacing my driving sunglasses or mini flashlight or US atlas. If someone really wanted them enough to steal them, t
Re:Airbags (Score:4, Interesting)
For all intents and purposes (in America, at least), a car whose airbags have deployed is effectively "totaled" because, from the insurance company's perspective, it's cheaper to pay the claim as a total loss and sell the car to a broker for export to some third-world country where the car can legally be repaired without the airbags and recertification than it is to pay to have it repaired, recertified, and liability-insured for use in the US.
Re:Airbags (Score:3, Insightful)
By which law?
I know that in my Ford (1999) if the airbags go off, the reset for the fuel pump may automatically shut off, but all I'd have to do is pop the trunk and hit the big red button....
One of the myths I've heard about the cow crushers on police cruisers is to not trip the airbags and render the cop car useless in case of a collision.. b
Re:Airbags (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd haggled a good deal on mine when I bought it, and they actually paid out a little mo
"Scanning" is a bit more than it actually is. (Score:5, Informative)
It's the same thing you can do with a $50 tool from AutoZone. Any time a problem is detected by the computer, it throws up a code. Some of these codes cause the SES light to come on, some don't. An ODBII scanner plugs in behind the dash and reads these codes from the computer modules, then displays them. Usually in a nicer to read format.
That's all this is doing. They call the OnStar system in the car, tell it to read the codes, and send it back to them. While it's possible for them to send other commands, there's really not much in it for them to do so. You can do some unusual things via that interface (I could have endless fun sticking your car into diagnostic mode and triggering the windshield wipers to run a test cycle), but you can't get back a whole lot of information that they don't already have. VIN, info on the car components, maybe miles travelled and such, but nothing that I would consider crucial to "privacy".
You could figure out MPG and average speed, but hell, I speed all the time and my computer system says my average is only around 40-ish. Instantaneous speed couldn't be gotten from the car via this interface.
Of course, they don't need the car to get that info. OnStar systems have a GPS built in, and that will give them instantaneous speed. But that doesn't require them talking to the car to do it.
Order placed (Score:5, Funny)
CD Stacker, check.
Driver's side airbag, check.
Tinfoil car-seat covers, check.
Let's roll.
Re:Order placed (Score:2)
You mean like this [theregister.co.uk]?
The ever going march of technology.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Take for example ink monitoring and re-ordering. These services have been successfully used by many computer users, especially IT professionals, but only as long as the service
Bah! (Score:5, Funny)
Now THATS a feature I'd pay for!
"Hello, this is On Star customer service, how may I help you?"
"Yes, my car has been carjacked, can we remotely deploy the airbags?"
"Sure, hold on..."
or if your worried about it... (Score:5, Insightful)
collecting data isn't inherently bad... (Score:2)
My apologies for the formatting... (Score:2)
Data Protection Laws (Score:2)
Bruce Schnier (amongst others) sees this as THE major problem with USA computer security right now...
They are also monitoring your driving. (Score:3, Informative)
It also has a built in cell phone, you press a button to boot the system, and everything else is hands free through the mic in the ceiling panel. You buy minutes in a package like any other cell phone.
Re:They are also monitoring your driving. (Score:4, Funny)
No, I didn't need to know that you bought a Hummer.
But now that I do know, can Onstar call you to tell you when you're near a cheap gas station?
When you drive to the grocery store, will OnStar call to tell you that you're driving an inefficient hunk of metal, and should have taken the sedan for your errands instead?
Re:I know this is a bit off-topic, but.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I know this is a bit off-topic, but.. (Score:2)
Re:I know this is a bit off-topic, but.. (Score:2)
As the previous responder mentioned, it's possible in commercial installations, but the owner should always be aware that the capability is there. In fact, it's a selling point. Certainly this isn't taking place in a residential environment, there's no need for panic if you're buying a new Kegerator.
In either case, "without the owner noti
Re:Do you really want a worst-case scenario? (Score:2)
I suspect I'd rather have that than having my car stolen - and let's face it, if their security is breached, and the crackers involved can remotely unlock any car they want, I'd expect car theft to go through the roof (or rather, through the open door).
Re:Do you really want a worst-case scenario? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Don't be stupid (Score:2)
If you don't think that the manufacturers can pull that one off, what about this one:
What if the manufacturer uses copyrights, patents and trademarks to impose after market restrictions upon the car's use?
Modify your car and they pull the license; your car then refuses to be started. Take matters into your own hands and they sue you for copyright infringement (using the car's software without a license), trademark infringement (driving around with their l
Its what they don't tell you... (Score:3, Interesting)