Vlad Soare
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2020
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- 65
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- Location
- Bucharest, Romania
- First Name
- Vlad
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Mustang GT 6MT
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Couldn't find it because vehicle didn't have the technologyNew World Order, it's here in our face, the battle is on! Wish I still had my modded 83 Caprice, stolen & never found
Yes, because that justifies a manufacturer to data log that stuff. There's nothing wrong with the eye for an eye fallacy!Black Box data logging has been around since 1994; GM was the first to use it.
Source:
https://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/pdf/esv/esv17/Proceed/00203.pdf
Now before everyone dawns their tin foil hats - why be concerned with how you’re tracked in your vehicle?
You’re being tracked as much if not more by your damn phones (or other mobile devices). You’re photos are tracked and tagged (for those that don’t know). You’re tracked via GPS the instant you use your in-vehicle navigation or plug into “Waze” or any other similar nav app. GPS also tracks speed, location, etc.
I mean, the “panic” over what the APIM or PCM is gathering is silly.
Not to mention the zillions of in-car camera, stop light camera, ATM camera, security camera, doorbell camera or XYZ camera footage being captured nearly EVERYWHERE across the planet these days.
All of us are being tracked, monitored, tagged, watched, listened to, recorded, etc... and in many instances without any one of us even knowing.
An APIM or PCM data log of your daily driving should be the least thing to worry about in 2020.
Accident reconstruction (major accidents) can determine if the person doing “4 mph over” had any fault in a major accident involving fatalities or serous wounds.