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All posts filed under “Privacy”

25 August, 2006

‘Carmakers must tell buyers about black boxes’

A traffic jam in south London, 2002

According to Reuters,

“The [US] government will not require recorders in autos but said on Monday that car makers must tell consumers when technology that tracks speed, braking and other measurements is in the new vehicles they buy.
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Filed under: Black box, Bureaucracy, Civil rights, Consumer rights, Control, Copyright, Crime, Design, Design engineering, Design philosophy, Design with Intent, Designers, Do artifacts have politics?, Embedding code, Engineering, Engineering design, Everyware, External Control, Future, Gadgets, Health and safety, Innovation, Law, Legislation, Liberty, Motoring, Norms, Panopticon, Pervasive computing, Philosophy of control, Political design, Privacy, Product design, Public money, Speed control, Speeding, Surveillance, Techniques of persuasion, Technology, Technology policy, Traffic calming, Ubiquitous computing, User experience, User Psychology, Vague rhetoric, Your property
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    By Dan Lockton 2004–25.
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