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Transportation United States

NHTSA Will Require Audible Seatbelt Reminders For Everyone In the Car (caranddriver.com) 253

Longtime Slashdot reader sinij shares a report from Car and Driver with the caption: "As someone that uses back seats to carry some luggage, I am not a fan of this requirement." From the report: Previously, federal standards governing seatbelt warnings only required manufacturers to monitor the driver's seat, issuing a chime if its seatbelt was unbuckled when the vehicle was underway. Now, a new rule has been finalized, requiring all new passenger vehicles sold in the U.S. to have enhanced front seatbelt warnings by September 1, 2026, and rear seatbelt warnings by September 1, 2027.

It's exactly 50 years since Congress attempted to mandate ignition interlocks tied to seatbelt use, in an effort to reduce deaths on the road. In that instance, the public revolted and the House blinked, repealing the interlock requirement later in the same year. [...] The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates that these new regulations will save about 50 lives per year, and reduce injuries by 500.

NHTSA Will Require Audible Seatbelt Reminders For Everyone In the Car

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  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @05:03AM (#65024539) Homepage

    Having to justify their non jobs by added on ever more spurious "safety" systems with a law of diminishing returns regards to actual safety. Having said that its even worse in the EU with endless warnings and bongs going off from driver awareness systems that don't work and in some cases actually distract the driver from paying attention to the road.

    • by BoB235423424 ( 6928344 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @05:24AM (#65024565)

      It's the problem when you have positions in government that are given a goal of reducing X by Y every year without a end point (or worse the ever favorite 'project 0' initiatives). The goals need to be set to get to a certain point of diminishing returns and then the positions eliminated and tax dollars shifted to something else. Instead, government only grows and never shrinks. Keeping obsolete agencies and projects alive forever.

      • by MrNaz ( 730548 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @08:49AM (#65024893) Homepage

        You know what will save far more lives?

        Universal health care.

        How Americans haven't revolted yet is beyond my understanding.

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      If I so much as lay my damn iphone in the passenger seat while driving the damn seatbelt alarm starts going off. Who the fuck weighs 8 ounces?

      • I'll frequently fasten the rear seatbelts if I'm carrying anything of any size in the back seats, and occasionally do the same with the passenger seatbelt, the idea is to make it more difficult for luggage to slide around when I'm taking corners. Obviously that won't work for really large objects but then it's time to put the rear seats down anyway.

        • I've never had rear seats....

          But my dog does set off the passenger seat from time to time...I just ignore it and it stops after a few seconds.

          Does it keep going on other cars out there and not shut up after a bit?

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        If I so much as lay my damn iphone in the passenger seat while driving the damn seatbelt alarm starts going off. Who the fuck weighs 8 ounces?

        That's the fault of a terrible design. I've never owned a car where putting a carton of beer (18 x 440 ml up to 24 x 500 ml) will set off the sensors... this include a very sensor happy Mercedes.

        The idea is a sound one, letting the driver know, quite clearly, if one of the passengers isn't wearing a seatbelt (especially as that passenger is likely to be their kid).

        • The article said this new addition....with cost and PITA annoyance will save maybe a whole 50 lives a year.....

          Seriously....?

          When is it worth leaving things up to personal responsibility and not mandating crap that raises costs and complexity in our vehicles....more shit to break.

          • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

            The way I read it; only 50 deaths are attributed to not wearing a seatbelt. Considering the high bodycount, it seems adoption of wearing seatbelts is already high. Maybe those 50 are a Darwinism effect. That begs the question, do we really want to save them? To what lengths do we go to keep these 50 dim lighbulbs from involuntarily checking out?

      • by Scoth ( 879800 )

        Most remotely modern cars detect a passenger with electrical fields (capacitance? Something), not weight. So various electronics tend to be more likely to trip the sensors than a lot of other things.

    • This is like those stupid fucking buttons you have to push to keep your vehicle from shutting off every time you stop. Whoever thought that was a good idea needs kicked in the nuts.

    • by cob666 ( 656740 )
      It's bad enough that when the front seatbelt warning went into effect, I had to keep my passenger seatbelt locked because I always put my backpack with my laptop in it on the passenger seat and it was JUST heavy enough that it triggered the warning. Now we have to keep the back seatbelts locked as well so we can put groceries on the back seat? Please provide an EASY way to disable them, or have them chime for a few seconds. Safety features that impede my normal use when they aren't required are features
  • People with disabilities or who suffer from severe obesity often struggle to find suitable belts. And extenders don't always fit in all cars. As some one who has difficulty fitting belts in the past I feel this will just punish people for not confirming to standard body types.
    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      People with disabilities or who suffer from severe obesity often struggle to find suitable belts.

      Having worked on integrating wheelchairs into cars, I can sympathize. But I don't think that going without a seatbelt, and then being angry that the car dings at you, and then being angry at NHTSA for the regulation, is really the right solution. Advocating for better seat belt systems or accessories seems a better approach, because ultimately that will result in greater safety for you.

  • by theNetImp ( 190602 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @05:14AM (#65024559)

    Just keep all the belts plugged in all the time

    • Re:Easy fix (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Orgasmatron ( 8103 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @05:19AM (#65024561)

      Yup. Better headline proposal: "NHTSA Mandates that Seatbelts Must be Stored in the Engaged Position, and not Retracted."

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        Shh.. Next they are going to come up with an update requiring that the system detect this situation. Probably around the same time they will mandate a shift interlock to prevent the car from shifting from Park into drive if a passenger is not belted properly or force emergency braking down to a certain speed and limp mode if it's already in drive when a seat is unbuckled.

    • by Megane ( 129182 )

      I've left my front passenger seat buckled for years, and it even helps keep cargo items in the seat restrained.

      But yeah, this is another case of bureaucrats trying to justify their existence by inconveniencing millions to save a few fools. ("We must do something! This is something!") I'm still sore about the backup cameras thing, mine (from 2013) has a horrible camera such that it shows mostly blobs of light or dark, and it also means you're stuck with the factory radio because of the screen. But at least

  • I guess this means more and more people will buy (or 3d print) the short buckle clips and leave them in permanently to prevent cargo from triggering warnings. Likely meaning when an occasional passenger sits in the back seat and finds they cannot insert the buckle, they'll just decide to go without.

    • I guess this means more and more people will buy (or 3d print) the short buckle clips and leave them in permanently to prevent cargo from triggering warnings. Likely meaning when an occasional passenger sits in the back seat and finds they cannot insert the buckle, they'll just decide to go without.

      Yep, like when kids were jumping off a passenger bridge to play in a creek despite the sign saying it was dangerous they eventually shut down the bridge for an entire summer to raise the fencing because of safety. Well it was the only way out of that end of the park so people were taking the train bridge instead including one woman I saw with a stroller. Not everything is thought through.

    • Why not buy really short seat belt extenders, and leave them plugged instead? That way the belts would still work, and they're only $15 a pair.

  • OK, is the marginal return on this regulation, 50 deaths and 500 injuries, worth the added price, both the financial and the Orwellian boot descending on human faces for eternity? I submit it is not. There should be some price in this live for being a dumbs**t. This is one of those price points. Perhaps NHTSA should have a nice soul to soul conversation with DOGE.

    {^_^}

    • Let me offer a counter argument.

      What is your life worth to you? Are you going to be one of the fifty that dies? Are you so very much inconvenienced that you'll permit others to die?

      Consider the complications of rear airbags. The seat in front of you is really close. How will a front-mounted, rear-facing airbag break your face?

      This isn't Orwell. This is protection for edge-cases. Yes, it does increase the costs, but few today argue the benefits of seatbelts as they did two decades ago.

      I also acknowledge that

      • This is the "nanny state"....

        We could save the cost and complexity of this and a LOT of the recently mandated crap with "personal responsibility"

        And, if you have none....that's why we have the Darwin Awards.

        If you're too stupid, maybe removing yourself from the gene pool isn't necessarily a bad thing for society?

        • You're using a brutalist approach to the problem of random auto accidents. If people were responsible, that's great, but accidents still happen despite the best actions and intentions.

          The socials are full of videos of Shit Happens. Some are gruesome and deadly, life-changing.

          Is Darwin at work there, or is it the fickle-finger-of-fate? Was it an unlucky day?

          Whichever is the case, we then have to deal with the aftermath, destruction of life and all that it entails, personal injury-- perhaps fixed short or lon

    • That is exactly the analysis that needs to be done, and exactly the analysis that provokes a strong negative reaction in the voting public. They'll yell at you for making the regulation, but yell louder for doing the math to explain why you shouldn't.

  • Wikipedia has a nice table of vehicle fatality statistics. Deaths per mile decreased steadily from roughly 1966 through 2014. In 2014, there were 1.08 deaths per million miles traveled. Since then, deaths/mile have increased by around 25%.

    Is it possible that new safety regulations are becoming counterproductive? Just as an example: FMVSS 214 and 226 started a phased program in 2013 that has led to airbags in the pillars, and thick pillars reduce visibility.

    • by Un-Thesis ( 700342 ) * on Thursday December 19, 2024 @05:52AM (#65024603) Homepage

      It's smartphone use that has increased the fatalities.

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        They should mandate a safety measure that makes sense for this: Drivers seat smartphone detection.

        Vehicle will monitor RF signal sources inside the cabin and block shifting into drive or accelerating upon detecting a Smartphone present within reach of the driver. And include a separate isolated compartment where smartphones are to be stowed while the vehicle is being operated.

    • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

      "airbags in the pillars, and thick pillars reduce visibility."

      As someone who's had an accident because a car was in my large blind spot to the rear I can testify to that. Yes, the accident was my fault, I should have done an over the shoulder full check and I normally do, but we're all human and humans make mistakes. The useless safety warning systems on my car would have been better utilised wanring me about vehicles in this blindspot , not just right next to me or out front where I can friggin see them!

      • >"Yes, the accident was my fault, I should have done an over the shoulder full check and I normally do, but we're all human and humans make mistakes"

        >" The useless safety warning systems on my car would have been better utilised wanring me about vehicles in this blindspot"

        And next we will have mandates for blind spot monitors. And those don't work correctly all the time, but drivers will come to "trust" them and then NOT LOOK over the shoulder and miss things *because* they have such monitors. So th

        • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @09:09AM (#65024963)

          And next we will have mandates for blind spot monitors. And those don't work correctly all the time, but drivers will come to "trust" them and then NOT LOOK over the shoulder and miss things *because* they have such monitors. So then they will add interlock warnings on the display to ALWAYS look over your shoulder which you have to clear EVERY TIME you start the damn car. Those same people not looking will still not look, and everyone will be annoyed. It is like an arms-race.

          The laws of unintended consequences is real.

          I am SICK of mandatory warnings, constant alerts, and settings that reset on every car start.

          Well, my vehicle has blind spot warnings, and they work very well - what is more, if I want to ignore them, I can sideswipe the idiot driving next to me. Or I can turn them off altogether, and do as I like

          What do you think of Turn signals? There was major outrage when the so called nanny state mandated them on all vehicles - and get this - they had to be retrofit.

          How about leaded gasoline? I remember howls of anger when the commies in guvment took it out.

      • "airbags in the pillars, and thick pillars reduce visibility."

        As someone who's had an accident because a car was in my large blind spot to the rear I can testify to that. Yes, the accident was my fault, I should have done an over the shoulder full check and I normally do, but we're all human and humans make mistakes. The useless safety warning systems on my car would have been better utilised wanring me about vehicles in this blindspot , not just right next to me or out front where I can friggin see them!

        My Jeep has blind spot warnings, and they've been handy. If a person is in your blind spot, say passing you, a light goes on in the rear view mirror. If you put your turn signal on while someone is in that zone, it has a very loud annunciator beep.

        I like it. I mean the noise is annoying, but it kind of trains you, because you don't want to hear it.

    • by shilly ( 142940 )

      This is easily disproved. If more stringent safety regulations made safety worse, then you would expect to see increases in deaths in all developed nations, not just the US, because all developed nations have been increasing the stringency of car safety regulations. But you don't. It's only in the US that you see an increase. And that's because the US is super-sizing its car fleet (and replacing cars with trucks) much faster and more extensively than anywhere else, and that is much more deadly than any othe

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        that's because the US is super-sizing its car fleet (and replacing cars with trucks) much faster and more extensively than anywhere else

        We should seriously increase the operator licensing requirements to drive larger cars and pick-up tricks.

        Also 5x the traffic enforcement and penalties for careless operation of large vehicles. If you're caught in a traffic violation such as running a stop sign on a large vehicle it should be an instant and Permanent ban against the driver ever operating a large vehicle ag

    • Wikipedia has a nice table of vehicle fatality statistics. Deaths per mile decreased steadily from roughly 1966 through 2014. In 2014, there were 1.08 deaths per million miles traveled. Since then, deaths/mile have increased by around 25%.

      Is it possible that new safety regulations are becoming counterproductive? Just as an example: FMVSS 214 and 226 started a phased program in 2013 that has led to airbags in the pillars, and thick pillars reduce visibility.

      Another thing is that as speed limits have increased, people just push harder. Now that the local interstates are at 70 mph, people want to drive at 80 mph, which means that if you want to run at a good clip, you're gonna do 100 mph. And after driving at high speeds, they normalize quickly.

      And despite what people think, many don't have the physical tools like good reflexes and a soft touch needed to drive safely at that speed. Shit happens quickly.

  • 50 people (Score:5, Insightful)

    by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @05:53AM (#65024607)

    If you want to save 50 people, have the police target red light runners. Just yesterday I almost hit a Jeep which thought running a red light after almost three seconds was perfectly fine. I'm at the head of the line. My light turns green. I go. As I'm just about at the intersection the Jeep comes from my right to make a left turn up the road beside me. Braking and plenty of horn was my response.

    I can guarantee, ticketing those who blatantly run red lights would go a lot further than this seat belt nonsense which, as always, will cost people money when they buy a car.

    • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

      People hate red light cameras.

      They seem to work though. When they were new people in my city were getting a lot more red light tickets than they are now.

      • Re:50 people (Score:5, Insightful)

        by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @07:21AM (#65024753)

        Red light cameras can actually INCREASE other types of accidents, with drivers slamming on their brakes during a yellow.

        I want actual police there, ticketing people. I want them going after assholes that actually/meaningfully run lights, tailgate, don't use turn signals, can't stay in their lanes, have blinding headlights and illegal color lights all over, and drive with deafening bass/music blaring.

        Instead, where I am, it seems none of that matters, all they care about is going after people for "speeding" who are often just going with/near the flow while doing nothing else wrong. Why? Probably because it is easy.

        • Well, people are supposed to stop during a yellow and only to continue if unable to stop in time, hence the car behind is supposed already be braking at that time, not trying to run the yellow light as well. Also, people are supposed to keep the bloody distance instead of being tailgating arseholes.

        • by mjwx ( 966435 )

          Red light cameras can actually INCREASE other types of accidents, with drivers slamming on their brakes during a yellow.

          That isn't a problem with red light cameras, that's a problem with how people in your area drive. I suspect there are also a lot of rear end crashes with people turning right.

          In most places you're taught to anticipate a light changing, even if it's green. If you're gunning it to a light and it suddenly turns yellow you've screwed up, not the light. Also the guy who's not maintaining a safe distance behind you (also likely not looking ahead and anticipating the light change).

          You've not highlighted a pr

        • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

          I don't see too much brake slamming in the city, but I guess that's subjective.

          Honestly, I'd rather have speed cameras here (or vigilant enforcement of limits) than red lights.

          Or really sane road design. The road that borders my block is designed like a 45mph highway with a 25mph speed limit. It is definitely NOT safe at 45mph (decent amount of pedestrian crossings, some semi blond pedestrian entry where someone only looking for cars will miss, and lots of mid block entry and exit).

          So, people running red li

        • Red light cameras can actually INCREASE other types of accidents, with drivers slamming on their brakes during a yellow.

          Bingo! I've said that if I was in a redlight cam area, I'm locking them up if I see a yellow light. I don't know the timing of when the light changes to red, so rather than catch a ticket, I'll let the other drivers learn not to tailgate.

          • by Holi ( 250190 )

            So you admit you are a horrible driver and part of the underlying problem.

            • So you admit you are a horrible driver and part of the underlying problem.

              I obey the laws, and will not run redlights.

              You appear to not understand that at least here in the USA, tailgating is not allowed. And running into someone from behind is always the fault of the tailgater. The fact that as the redlight cam companies shortened the yellow light period in order to hand out more tickets (PROFIT!) is why many places stopped using the cams.

              It was causing accidents - and those were the fault of the person driving too closely.

        • Red light cameras can actually INCREASE other types of accidents, with drivers slamming on their brakes during a yellow.

          That's because in certain places the city hired a private company to collect infractions and they reduced the yellow light time.

          Nobody follows this rule anymore but I try and practice it. If the car in front of you does a panic stop and you hit them, you were too close.

        • Red light cameras can actually INCREASE other types of accidents, with drivers slamming on their brakes during a yellow.

          In addition, since it is often outsourced to a 3rd party that gives the city a cut, it's not a 'ticket' so contesting it is harder; and some have supposedly reduced the yellow light time to get more revenue. The solution is more enforcement as you say, but red light cams were viewed as easy money under the guise of making streets safer.

        • Red light cameras can actually INCREASE other types of accidents, with drivers slamming on their brakes during a yellow.

          No, they certainly do not. Drivers speeding and/or not maintaining a safe following distance does that.

          Instead, where I am, it seems none of that matters, all they care about is going after people for "speeding" who are often just going with/near the flow while doing nothing else wrong. Why? Probably because it is easy.

          That's correct, it's easy for the government to win in court when it's a speeding violation. If you want to get someone for e.g. reckless endangerment or vehicular assault then it's much more difficult and therefore potentially expensive.

        • I (and I suspect most people here) have been in a situation where the light turns yellow and I can't safely stop, so I have to keep going. Unfortunately, the red light camera snapped me when the light turned red *in the intersection*. Then they decreased the "all red clear" interval to try and get more tickets. They also decreased the yellow light delay, so it was literally about one second. This was on a road in Ohio in the winter when if I'd slammed on the brakes I would have slid all over the intersectio
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      If you want to save 50 people, have the police target red light runners. Just yesterday I almost hit a Jeep which thought running a red light after almost three seconds was perfectly fine. I'm at the head of the line. My light turns green. I go. As I'm just about at the intersection the Jeep comes from my right to make a left turn up the road beside me. Braking and plenty of horn was my response.

      I can guarantee, ticketing those who blatantly run red lights would go a lot further than this seat belt nonsense which, as always, will cost people money when they buy a car.

      I strongly suspect that the kind of people who run red lights are also the kinds of people who think they shouldn't wear seatbelts.

  • In the UK, I remember the Clunk click every trip [wikipedia.org] campaign of the 1970s, although I must remember it from reruns because my certain memories would be from about 1975 onwards. At the time, there was also a lot of whinging about overreach, how it wasn't necessary because they were such good drivers, etc. etc..

    You are here. Many also are in the "whinging about something that's obviously a good idea" stage. They're talking about a thing going beep, I saw one person describing that in (literal) Orwellian terms
    • by redback ( 15527 )

      its not about avoiding wearing seatbelts.

      its avoiding having stupid alarms go off when you put your bag on the seat.

      • by mccalli ( 323026 )
        Which is true for the front seat too. Which goes beep today as well, and then switches off. That's it.
      • The seat is the wrong place for bags.

        • It's astonishing to me how many people fail to understand that the passenger compartment is for passengers and the cargo compartment is for cargo. If you are going to put your bag on the seat, secure it with the seatbelt. That way it won't go flying around the passenger cabin and injure the driver in case of an accident.
      • If the bag is big enough to trip the occupancy switch, then it's big enough to cause harm in an accident, and you should belt it in. This will prevent the chime.

        You're complaining about something that wouldn't happen if you did the intelligent thing to protect yourself.

      • its not about avoiding wearing seatbelts.

        its avoiding having stupid alarms go off when you put your bag on the seat.

        Life is sooooo hard isn't it? Protip - just click the seatbelts, leave them clicked, then that stupid alarm won't ruin your day.

        These people whining about first world problems.

    • ... talking about four seconds ...

      How many times have you been in the back seat? By the time I; put my arse on the seat, put my stuff on the floor/empty seat, slowly extend the seat-belt strap, feel for the receiver in the dark, feel around a third time because it's underneath me, align the tongue with the receiver, turn-over the tongue because it's upside-down, push it in, that's 20-50 seconds. The driver has to wait until I do all that before merging with traffic.

      I not objecting to safety-conscious drivers, but don't belittle the very

    • In the UK, I remember the Clunk click every trip [wikipedia.org] campaign of the 1970s, although I must remember it from reruns because my certain memories would be from about 1975 onwards. At the time, there was also a lot of whinging about overreach, how it wasn't necessary because they were such good drivers, etc. etc..

      A couple of my favorites are the ladies who complained it would wrinkle their dresses, and the big one - everyone knew someone who knew someone who knew someone who was killed because they wore a seat belt.

      You are here. Many also are in the "whinging about something that's obviously a good idea" stage. They're talking about a thing going beep, I saw one person describing that in (literal) Orwellian terms as a boot crushing the face of humanity. People - get a grip. It's a good idea - not only from the people in the back's point of view, but also from the driver and passenger in the front's point of view so they're not hit by flying bodies in an accident. They're talking about four seconds of beeping.

      True - people are going into hysterics over stupid stuff. My vehicle has all manner of goodies on it, from the mandated backup cam, to lane assist to blind spot sensors, to anti tailgating radar to pedestrian sensors.

      The only one I ever turn off is if I am in snowy weather, I'll turn off lane assist,

  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @06:28AM (#65024667)

    You can't engineer out stupid or irresponsible. You only end up pissing people off. As someone who drives a nearly 40 year old SUV, whenever I travel somewhere and have to rent a car, all of the "safety" features frustrate me. How the hell do I get this damn thing into reverse?!? Oh, I have to step on the brake, pat my head, and rub my stomach in order to release the parking brake? Jesus, I just want to DRIVE THE DAMN CAR!! I've been traveling with my dog and I have to plug in the passenger seat belt to keep the damn warning lights and dings from going off every time the dog moves into the front seat. If I have to do this in the back seats, that's going to piss me off even further. What's going to happen is someone is going to start selling seat belt plugs on Amazon. That is until the nanny state mandates something like they have to be unplugged and then plugged in order to start the car. That's also going to ruin a Hollywood horror movie trope.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by shilly ( 142940 )

      Of *course* you can engineer out stupid and irresponsible. That's *literally one of the main goals* of safety engineering. Don't try to segue to a point about not being able to *completely* engineer out these things. Obviously, everything human is fallible. But can we reduce the number of car deaths caused by stupidity and irresponsibility? We've been doing exactly that for decades. Till 2014 in the US, when that positive trend was outweighed (literally) by the US love affair with giant cars and trucks.

      • Of *course* you can engineer out stupid and irresponsible. That's *literally one of the main goals* of safety engineering. Don't try to segue to a point about not being able to *completely* engineer out these things.

        It is the old make perfect the enemy of good thing they are doing.

        It's also inertia effect, hatred of change, perhaps even a bit of survivor's bias.

        I've listened to people bawling about any and all changes, from when I was really young and they took lead out of gasoline, to fits about anti-lock brakes, to backup cameras, and now, people in the back seats wearing seatbelts.

        Might even be a bit of stupidity. I wore seat belts since I learned to drive back around 1972, and if you are in my car, passeng

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      You can't engineer out stupid or irresponsible. You only end up pissing people off. As someone who drives a nearly 40 year old SUV, whenever I travel somewhere and have to rent a car, all of the "safety" features frustrate me. How the hell do I get this damn thing into reverse?!? Oh, I have to step on the brake, pat my head, and rub my stomach in order to release the parking brake? Jesus, I just want to DRIVE THE DAMN CAR!! I've been traveling with my dog and I have to plug in the passenger seat belt to keep the damn warning lights and dings from going off every time the dog moves into the front seat. If I have to do this in the back seats, that's going to piss me off even further. What's going to happen is someone is going to start selling seat belt plugs on Amazon. That is until the nanny state mandates something like they have to be unplugged and then plugged in order to start the car. That's also going to ruin a Hollywood horror movie trope.

      Amazing how anyone drives at all with the way you make it sound... I must be a driving god to you because I choose to drive a manual transmission which means I need to operate an accelerator, clutch pedal, gear stick and steering wheel at the same time with a good degree of precision. I humbly accept your prostration at my superhuman motoring abilities.

      Oh dear, you have to have your foot on the brake to put the car in drive... it's not like this is because people have been whacking it into drive without

  • Sorry NHTSA, but if they're not smart enough to put on a seat belt, I don't want them to survive.

    • ... don't want them to survive.

      That will work for the driver, but for passengers, the result is serious brain damage or broken bones. If it's brain damage or a broken neck, the government is liable for a lifetime of home/hospital care. If it's a damaged vertebra, that's a life-time of addictive pain medication.

    • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
      Sure, but if you've ever seen any accident reports from car crashes you'll realise that it's not at all uncommon for people in backseats without their belt on to end up in the front of the vehicle, or even go through the front windscreen, in high-energy impacts. The UK legislation around seatbelts makes it the resonsibility of the driver to ensure everyone has their belt on which, IMHO, makes a lot of sense as they're the one responsible for the general safe operation of the vehicle, meaning they'll get an
    • by shilly ( 142940 )

      Who do you think sits in the back most often? Children. And yes, children may be too stupid to put on a seat belt, which is fine and normal because they're... children. This reminds the adults in the car with the children to make sure the kids' seatbelts are fastened.

  • Just no. I'm OK with seatbelt laws. I'm OK with a reminder chime for the first minute the vehicle is in gear or whatever.

    I already have a car that periodically dings if I so much as put my lunch bag on the front passenger seat and I want to rip the fucking speakers out and shove them up the manufacturer's ass.

  • Any new car bought in the past 10 years has rear seatbelt warnings, but they all allow you to disable them. This is because the systems don't account for all the random stuff that gets thrown into the back seat of a vehicle, and also don't deal with child seats, nor do they deal with drop-offs.

    Hopefully whatever this regulation is allows the driver to dismiss the alert and/or allows the system to be completely turned off. We had it turned off for the 9 years my child was in a car seat / booster seat because

  • A cop on a /motorcycle/ will pull you over and demand money from you for not being safe.

    Many stupid people are easily fooled into not seeing this by all the added steps of abstraction that are interposed to control them.

  • Other audio book suppliers are available.
  • Here's an argument in favor, drawn from my own personal experience. Kids: they are constantly doing stupid things, like idly unbuckling the seat belt because they're bored. Because they're in the back seat I, the driver, can't always see or hear these shenanigans. But I can hear the seat belt warning when it goes off, and so can the kids. So after pulling that stunt in a relatively new car, they learned that they'd get caught and told off. I've even pulled the car over to enforce compliance.

    Unbelted
    • *gasp* You mean that it's actually a bad idea to try and save time in the morning by running my TV and toaster in the shower while I'm drying my hair? Will wonders never cease!
  • I'll continue to dump money into my 2002 Dodge Ram that gets 10mpg as long as I can find parts for it. They've already made it almost impossible to get a truck with an 8ft bed unless it's custom ordered. And yes, I need it because I do real work that baby trucks can't handle efficiently.

    I say remove all audible seat belt warnings and let evolution sort it out. The same is true for huge labels on hair dryers warning of the danger of using them in the shower and similar warnings that only server to keep s
    • Where do you live that you can't get a truck with an 8 ft bed? I'm pretty sure all "full size" pickups have beds that can fit a sheet of plywood (without it hanging over the tailgate) and I think that's true even in crew cab configurations.

      Kids are the reason that audible seatbelt warnings are a good idea. Kids are notorious for removing seatbelts for various reasons including wanting to nap across the whole back seat. An audible warning alerts the driver so they can take care of the situation. Of cou

      • Where do you live that you can't get a truck with an 8 ft bed? I'm pretty sure all "full size" pickups have beds that can fit a sheet of plywood (without it hanging over the tailgate) and I think that's true even in crew cab configurations.

        If the tailgate has to be down then it's not fitting a sheet of plywood and you're required to have a flag on it because the tailgate is sticking out past the tail lights. Statistically nobody is doing that, of course, unless the lumber sticks out WAY past the bed.

        Most pickups are now sold as crew cab, short bed. Most dealers do not bother to stock many if any long beds (or single cabs) because people don't buy them. Mostly people who want them also want a base model which isn't as profitable to sell for th

  • by Wolfier ( 94144 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @08:39AM (#65024871)
    Ensuring SUV headlights won't blind incoming cars at their "normal" (i.e. not hi beam) settings?
  • I don't know about this guy, but my car has a *trunk*. Luggage in the rear seat strike me as a safety hazard anyway; in a collision they could become projectiles.

    • If you have a truck you can't really use the bed for large amounts of loose items as they'll blow around or out. The bed is mostly for larger items. As such they need to go into the back seat.

      And the "projectiles" bit is just spreading fear anyways. Not only are crashes not the norm, but a box of spaghetti smacking you against the head is the least of your worries in a car accident.

  • Dumb (Score:4, Interesting)

    by MBGMorden ( 803437 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @09:17AM (#65025003)

    The most common way these things detect a passenger in a seat is weight - which is also caused by items or cargo in the car. I don't want to face endless chimes or buckle in a few 12 packs of sodas.

    Its bad enough that my truck already thinks anything I put in the back seat is a child so I get the "check the rear seat for children" alarm. Which can be disabled, but ironically, the pop up on my screen that says not to focus on the screen while driving as it can cause accidents can not. And what usually pulls my attention to the screen? The damned pop-up that says not to be looking at it.

  • by Deathlizard ( 115856 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @09:18AM (#65025015) Homepage Journal

    I can't wait until someone does a study on how many people die because they got into an accident either because they were distracted by the seat belt chime, or was trying to put the seat belt on while driving to stop the chime.

    I'll bet it kills more than 50 people a year.

  • My seatbelt already talks to me: Every time I put it on it says I'm fatter than I was last time.

  • Will the chiming carry on nonstop if you put some relatively heavy item on any of the relevant seats? If not, how will the system know it is just a heavy item, not a person? Well, I guess one could always buckle up the belt under the heavy item.
  • by ElizabethGreene ( 1185405 ) on Thursday December 19, 2024 @10:23AM (#65025257)

    I am currently assembling a CNC mill that I 100% expect to pay for by making seat belt silencers.

    Why would someone want that? Why bypass a safety feature? Because I, and a whole lot of other people, keep our bags on the passenger seat I we don't forget them.

There is no time like the present for postponing what you ought to be doing.

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