Alfa Romeo is Building NFTs Into Latest Hybrid Car To Record Vehicle Data (coindesk.com) 29
Italian luxury car maker Alfa Romeo has revealed it will be using non-fungible tokens (NFT) to track and store maintenance records on the blockchain for its new Tonale SUV. From a report: Alfa Romeo, which is owned by Stellantis (formerly Fiat Chrysler), appears to be the first carmaker to utilize NFTs in this way, seemingly in a bid to bring transparency and efficiency to a car market that often relies on third parties to track car records. "Digitalization is a key enabler of our metamorphosis," Francesco Calcara, head of marketing at Alfa Romeo, said in a media briefing. "[The NFTs] will sustain the residual values of our models as we are the first in the market to adopt this next-generation technology." The company says the car's NFT will be able to generate a certificate from records of its maintenance data, but only for service done by certified dealers.
owned by the dealers and you need to buy it if 3rd (Score:4, Insightful)
owned by the dealers and you need to buy it if 3rd party repair needs it.
Re:owned by the dealers and you need to buy it if (Score:4, Insightful)
Yep, could have been a nice way to keep a complete service history for the car that can't be altered to show that it wasn't previously written off or whatever. Instead it will be used to make sure 3rd party repairs are impossible.
Why?! (Score:1)
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Have we sunk so far down in the trust scale that we need to put things such as repair records into a blockchain forever?
You should not assume that things will be in the blockchain forever. It is highly likely that no one will care to retain a copy of this blockchain.
Public blockchain is a lot like Linus Torvolds' backup strategy: upload it to FTP and let other people mirror it. It works fine if people are willing to do that.
Won't last 10 minutes (Score:2)
This will be hacked before the first one needs serviced. Alfa Romeo have enough problems getting reliability in their core area of competency; they're not going to do this right.
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"The car will break down before any hacker can breach it, after all it is an Alfa. "
No sane person would buy one, not even Italians.
Former Alfa owner here (Score:2)
(granted, of the models sold in the USA)
Alfas just to be made for people who were passionate about cars, for people who were passionate about cars. When buying a used Alfa, a full set of repair records were expected to be on hand. Any Alfa that didn't have any records sold with the car, was viewed with suspicion.
As (at least in my area) not too many Alfas were around, word grew quickly which ones were "legit" and which ones were cobbled together nightmares, like the sole imported RHD GTA perpetually being s
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And yes, reliability has become first and foremost, but in the search for reliability, we've lost the character of the cars. Their soul if you will.
Today's cars have all the personality and character of dry bread.
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No worries, just buy an old beater that breaks down at random times. For bonus points, do extensive work on it yourself. Nothing gets the adrenaline going than realizing your life may depend on that bit of amateur mechanical work you did while tired and frustrated. For extra bonus points get into kit built airplanes.
The worst kind of marketing BS (Score:5, Insightful)
In no way are NFTs or blockhains required for storing this sort of data securely , this is nothing more than marketdroids learning some buzzwords they can put in the brochure and telling the engineers to shut up and implement it regardless or whether its a good idea or not.
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Not only not required - it is actually a stupid idea, compared to an ordinary database. At best - if they run their own blockchain, it will just be stupidly inefficient. At worst, if they use a public blockchain, they will have costs and security issues.
Cryptocurrencies do have genuine uses. For example, apparently in the US sex workers have trouble keeping bank accounts and payment processors, because of US religious idiots. Many have moved to cryptocurrencies for payments, because they are (so far, anywa
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> Bet: Alfa Romeo will also have this data in an SQL database, and the blockchain is just for show.
A saving grace is that Fiat is probably going to go out of business and then the used market can verify maintenance records.
They can screw it all up by having the blockchain hold a hash of the SQL db record instead of real data.
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Welcome! Remember 2019/2020 when the keyword was "Blockchain" and every company was becoming a "blockchain" company?
You might remember a certain iced tea company pivoting to blockchain and seeing a massive rise in their stock. Then someti
Nice Alfa you've got there... (Score:5, Insightful)
...it'd be a shame if its resale value were reduced because you didn't have all service done at a dealership so the receipts were certified on our blockchain.
This is an end-run around right-to-repair laws like the one in Massachusetts. You can do the repairs and maintenance yourself, or you can take them to a third-party mechanic... but that means the work won't be recorded on the car's blockchain, and therefore won't be "certified." They're likely hoping that will reduce the perceived resale value of the car. I'm sure that soon enough, they'll start saying "Before buying a used Alfa, always check for full blockchain-certified service records to prove the work was done, and done right by an Alfa dealer."
Wouldn't surprise me if they try to tie warranty service to blockchain-certified service records, but in the U.S. that would probably run afoul of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act's tie-in prohibitions.
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I sold a vehicle at carmax... had every paper receipt for every oil change... back then i was really into doing them before the required timeframe. Guess what the Carmax guy said when I pulled out the boxload of paper... he didn't need to see any of it, wouldn't change the price. >:(
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Were you trying to sell a theoretically collectible but notoriously unreliable Italian car made using a mix of Peugeot, Fiat, Chrysler, and obsolete second-hand Mercedes technology?
I suspect that maintenance records are a bit more impactful for Alfas than they are for many other brands.
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A certified repair station just needs to record the work performed in the official database and job done. No NFT needed.
It's just a buzzword. They're not even using the buzzword correctly since no one will be buying or selling the Non-Fungible Tokens. But it sounds sexier to the uninformed than "crypto authenticated service records".
The Destiny of the Blockchain (Score:2)
Warranty Violation (Re:Destiny of the Blockchain) (Score:2)
Dear Alfa Customer,
According to our block chain you did not properly service your vehicle at an authorized dealer. Therefore, your warranty is now void and we have added this information to your car's permanent block chain record NFT.
Your car is now worth 30 to 50% than other Alfa's of the same vintage due to your negligence.
Have a nice day!
Sincerely,
Alfa Romeo
Bleeding edge. (Score:2)
so much stupid in one news release. (Score:1)
Technobabble (Score:2)
> the carâ(TM)s NFT will be able to generate a certificate from records of its maintenance data, but only for service done by certified dealers.
Just store the maintenance records on a blockchain. Have the car and the dealer sign the transaction with merged ed25519 or something.
NFT's are for tracking ownership of digital property - the hell are these people talking about?
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NFT's are for tracking ownership of digital property - the hell are these people talking about?
An NFT is just a crypto-coin with a piece of metadata attached. You can store whatever you want in the metadata.
One day... (Score:2)
NFTs will cure cancer.
Makes perfect sense (Score:2)
Company which can't design a reliable car to save themselves also can't design a functional maintenance management system either.
Need technical details (Score:2)