Desert News: Car black boxes: The secret spy inside your automobile

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Desert News: Car black boxes: The secret spy inside your automobile

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http://www.deseretnews.com/article/8655 ... obile.html
WASHINGTON — When airplanes crash, investigators look for the black box (an electronic data recorder that contains information such as speed and altitude) to help understand what happened. The data can help improve safety in design and procedures — and affix blame.

The U.S. Senate has passed a bill that would require similar "event data recorders" or EDRs to be in all new vehicles by 2015. The House is also expected to pass the measure, according to Car and Driver.

PC World says the bill makes it clear the information in the EDRs would belong to the owner or lessee of the cars: "According to the text of the bill, the data on the recording device may not be retrieved by anyone other than the owner or the lessee … unless, of course, the government asks for it."

But for most people, this is all rather moot. As IEEE Spectrum points out, "According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), 85 percent of new vehicles come equipped with black boxes. Still, the average driver has no idea that in the event of a crash, data stored in the box details how the car was being driven in the moments before impact."

Spectrum also said that such technology is "sure to play an ever greater role in courtroom drama." You can say you were only traveling 50 miles per hour, but with the EDR, the government can (with your permission or with a court order) download exactly how fast you were going — plus whether you braked, had your seat belt on and other data.

This happened recently in Pittsburgh, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, where a teen was convicted of three counts of homicide by vehicle after the 2007 Dodge Caliber he was driving crashed — killing three people. "According to testimony at trial," the Post-Gazette said, "...and information recovered from the Event Data Recorder in the vehicle — Safka was traveling 106 mph just before the crash."

EDRs also figure in lawsuits against Toyota for alleged incidents of sudden-acceleration. CONTINUED ...
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/8655 ... obile.html
Sean Haight, PhD

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