WASHINGTON (AP) - Many motorists don't know it, but it's likely that
every time they get behind the wheel, there's a snitch along for the
ride.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
on Friday proposed long-delayed regulations requiring auto manufacturers
to include event data recorders - better known as "black boxes" - in
all new cars and light trucks beginning Sept. 1, 2014. But the agency is
behind the curve. Automakers have been quietly tucking the devices,
which automatically record the actions of drivers and the responses of
their vehicles in a continuous information loop, into most new cars for
years.
When a car is involved in a crash or when its
airbags deploy, inputs from the vehicle's sensors during the 5 to 10
seconds before impact are automatically preserved. That's usually enough
to record things like how fast the car was traveling and whether the
driver applied the brake, was steering erratically or had a seat belt
on.
The idea is to gather information that can help
investigators determine the causes of accidents and lead to safer
vehicles. But privacy advocates say government regulators and automakers
are spreading an intrusive technology without first putting in place
policies to prevent misuse of the information collected.
Data collected by the recorders is increasingly
showing up in lawsuits, criminal cases and high-profile accidents.
Massachusetts Lt. Gov. Timothy Murray initially said that he wasn't
speeding and that he was wearing his seat belt when he crashed a
government-owned car last year. But the Ford Crown Victoria's data
recorder told a different story: It showed the car was traveling more
than 100 mph and Murray wasn't belted in.
In 2007, then-New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine was
seriously injured in the crash of an SUV driven by a state trooper.
Corzine was a passenger. The SUV's recorder showed the vehicle was
traveling 91 mph on a parkway where the speed limit was 65 mph, and
Corzine didn't have his seat belt on.
There's no opt-out. It's extremely difficult for
car owners to disable the recorders. Although some vehicle models have
had recorders since the early 1990s, a federal requirement that
automakers disclose their existence in owner's manuals didn't go into
effect until three months ago. Automakers that voluntarily put recorders
in vehicles are also now required to gather a minimum of 15 types of
data.
Besides the upcoming proposal to put recorders in
all new vehicles, the traffic safety administration is also considering
expanding the data requirement to include as many as 30 additional types
of data such as whether the vehicle's electronic stability control was
engaged, the driver's seat position or whether the front-seat passenger
was belted in. Some manufacturers already are collecting the
information. Engineers have identified more than 80 data points that
might be useful.
Privacy complaints have gone unheeded so far. The
traffic safety administration says it doesn't have the authority to
impose limits on how the information can be used and other privacy
protections. About a dozen states have some law regarding data
recorders, but the rest do not.
"Right now we're in an environment where there are
no rules, there are no limits, there are no consequences and there is no
transparency," said Lillie Coney, associate director of the Electronic
Privacy Information Center, a privacy advocacy group. "Most people who
are operating a motor vehicle have no idea this technology is integrated
into their vehicle."
Part of the concern is that the increasing
computerization of cars and the growing communications to and from
vehicles like GPS navigation and General Motors' OnStar system could
lead to unintended uses of recorder data.
"Basically your car is a computer now, so it can
record all kinds of information," said Gloria Bergquist, vice president
of the Alliance of Automotive Manufacturers. "It's a lot of the same
issues you have about your computer or your smartphone and whether
Google or someone else has access to the data."
The alliance opposes the government requiring recorders in all vehicles.
Data recorders "help our engineers understand how
cars perform in the real world, and we already have put them on over 90
percent of (new) vehicles without any mandate being necessary,"
Bergquist said.
Safety advocates, however, say requiring data
recorders in all cars is the best way to gather a large enough body of
reliable information to enable vehicle designers to make safer
automobiles.
"The barn door is already open. It's a question of
whether we use the information that's already out there," said Henry
Jasny, vice president of Advocates for Highway and Automotive Safety.
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said that
requiring recorders in all new cars "will give us the critical insight
and information we need to save more lives."
"By understanding how drivers respond in a crash
and whether key safety systems operate properly, (government safety
officials) and automakers can make our vehicles and our roadways even
safer," LaHood said.
The National Transportation Safety Board has been
pushing for recorders in all passenger vehicles since the board's
investigation of a 2003 accident in which an elderly driver plowed
through an open-air market in Santa Monica, Calif. Ten people were
killed and 63 were injured. The driver refused to be interviewed and his
1992 Buick LeSabre didn't have a recorder. After ruling out other
possibilities, investigators ultimately guessed that he had either
mistakenly stepped on the gas pedal or had stepped on the gas and the
brake pedals at the same time.
When reports of sudden acceleration problems in
Toyota vehicles cascaded in 2009 and 2010, recorder data from some of
the vehicles contributed to the traffic safety administration's
conclusion that the problem was probably sticky gas pedals and floor
mats that could jam them, not defects in electronic throttle control
systems.
"Black box," a term for a device whose workings are
obscure, is most widely used to refer to flight data recorders, which
continually gather information about an aircraft's operation during
flight. Aircraft recorders, by law, are actually bright orange.
Some automakers began installing the recorders at a
time when there were complaints that air bags might be causing deaths
and injuries, partly to protect themselves against liability and partly
to improve air bag technology. Most recorders are black boxes about the
size of a deck of cards with circuit boards inside. After an accident,
information is downloaded to a laptop computer using a tool unique to
the vehicle's manufacturer. As electronics in cars have increased, the
kinds of data that can be recorded have grown as well. Some more recent
recorders are part of the vehicle's computers rather than a separate
device.
Rep. Michael Capuano, D-Mass., has repeatedly
introduced legislation to require that automakers design recorders so
that they can be disabled by motorists but has been unsuccessful in his
efforts.
A transportation bill passed by the Senate earlier
this year would have required that all new cars and light trucks have
recorders and designated a vehicle's owner as the owner of the data. The
provision was removed during House-Senate negotiations on the measure
at the behest of House Republican lawmakers who said they were concerned
about privacy.
"Many of us would see it as a slippery slope toward
big government and Big Brother knowing what we're doing and where we
are," Rep. Bill Shuster, R-Pa., who is slated to take over the
chairmanship of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee in
January, said at the time. "Privacy is a big concern for many across
America."